That's an interesting question.
In fact, we use the Trillium report, but we don't endorse it because we cannot replicate—we did not even try to replicate—the numbers that are in the Trillium report. That was not our objective.
We just wanted to look at the government's statements that this would be paid back in less than five years. Using the same report that they used, we conclude that it's significantly longer than that because the government's statements to the effect that these investments would be paid back in less than five years assume not only that these battery plants will be built and operational but also that a whole ecosystem will be built.
Even in the Trillium report, the report admits that for that to happen it would require additional government subsidies for all these other nodes to be established in Canada—from mining exploration to EV assembly to even EV recycling—and also that these would require infrastructure investments, for example, to get access to the mines and the minerals. There are a lot of assumptions made in that report, which suggest that the statements that the government made to the effect that this would be paid back in less than five years are, to say the least, wildly optimistic.