That is why we didn't take into account all the clusters the Trillium Network included in its report, which assumes that the subsidies to build one or two battery plants will spur the creation of a wide range of clusters, from prospecting and mine production to vehicle assembly and recycling. As noted in the Trillium Network report, the subsidies necessary for that would have to cover 20% to 35% of costs.
For that reason, we didn't include all those other aspects. Nothing is guaranteed, to use a term I don't really want to use. I'll put it in terms of an analogy: you can't sell the bearskin before you kill the bear, but in this case, you can't sell the bearskin before the bear is born. We don't know whether those clusters will emerge in Canada. If they do, we don't know whether it would've happened even without the subsidies to support American plants, for instance. That's why we didn't include all those other elements.
Mr. Perkins talked about fairy dust. I wouldn't go that far, but that's more or less what it is. I'll leave it there.