Thank you so much. That's a very important line of questioning. Hopefully, I'm answering your question as directly as I can.
The demand for copper is going to be quite a bit bigger—even conservative estimates are very strong. The world has to consider all avenues for access to copper, including through extraction and then refining virgin copper from the earth, as well as what has already been extracted and transformed into some manufactured product, and then the recycling of those.
There will be differentials around the world in terms of how this is approached. In Canada, we are very fortunate to have natural resources and the ability to extract and process, etc. There are countries that are not as fortunate as Canada. They are looking very hard at how to recycle what they have within their borders now and where to get access to greater post-consumer product recycling. I would imagine that those approaches will put farther ahead the ability for recycling to be a more viable economic way in which to do this.
It's not absent right now, of course. You know that the Horne foundry is accepting recycled material and is processing that. It's a very important part of what it does. It does both. It takes virgin copper and it takes recycled content. I would see more of both things happening around the world, and I would see Canada having a very important role in how this plays out as well.