The first thing is that, if we agree that this is critical to our national interests, we need to look at the entire value chain and figure out where our friction points are and then mitigate against those so that we are able to build them here.
I'll give you another example of the reason why we want to process material in Canada.
We ship most of our critical minerals out for others to process on our behalf. There are residual outcomes from these processes. In one case, critical minerals that are processed produce another critical mineral. Maybe 30 tonnes are produced globally. Every single pair of night-vision goggles produced globally has this critical mineral in it. Canada could be the main provider of it, but we're not anymore because we ship it all out.
When you talk about national security and national interests, one would think that, if we can get the foundries and the value added here, then we're not only becoming a valued ally or exporter, but we are also providing great high-paying jobs and all the rest of it for economic benefit to Canada.