When I look at the general economy in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and every province, manufacturing is a very big part of the local economies and—this gets a bit more to what Mr. Fillmore was getting at—each province might have a different sector or a different part of the economy that they are manufacturing for particularly.
In the small town my parents farmed around, Frontier, for example, there is a business called Honey Bee Manufacturing. I spoke about it at length in my speech. Were it not for Honey Bee, the big source of employment for the region would be gone. In many small towns all throughout the country, that is what the jobs are.
If you look at Quebec, you guys produce some fantastic aluminum there. There are other aspects of manufacturing that are going to be beneficial to that. This is providing more opportunity for more Quebec aluminum, per se, across the country to be utilized and used, but predominantly, it's about choice.
It comes down to the end user. We have innovation from our manufacturers. They are world class on that side, but when it comes down to choice for the consumer, for the farmer or for the companies in forestry and mining to be able to have the products that they need to do the best job that they can do, that's what this is all about. It's giving them the tools they need to succeed.