I appreciate that sentiment. Let me give you a sense of the return on investment for somebody who's looking at this sector, because it's very relevant. We think about the concept of critical minerals and the industries they're going to feed into.
A gold deposit could exist, theoretically, in northern Ontario or the Northwest Territories. You could have a process facility on site. You could produce the material on site. You could fly the revenue-generating material off site. The amount of infrastructure that's required to go into that and the timeline it'll take to develop the infrastructure to bring that product to market is extremely short compared to what we're talking about here with respect to rare earths or things that may not have current processing capacity in Canada.
When we think about where the next dollar of investment is going to go into the ground in terms of Canadian exploration, it's inherently attracted to those things that have a shorter timeline for investor return, like a gold deposit or, potentially, a copper deposit that's in a known area with processing capacity.
That's why we're really focused on this idea of expanding an incentive for a part of the sector where very few funds actually go, and for something that requires a significant amount of exploration effort to start to understand where these production centres and this capacity could be.