It's hard to say, but it's the underlying assumption. Canada is a market of 30 million people. We can't produce everything. You need a certain scale to produce certain goods. What we need to do is focus on the areas where we're strong and on whether we are going to be able to make economic gains in this agreement as a result.
To say that we have the world's leading technology in all areas is obviously not true. At this very moment we import, for instance, wind turbines from Denmark. Realistically, are we going to become better resourced in wind turbines and solar cells than Germany or Denmark? It will be tough, but the thing is, as long as those companies are investing in Canada, producing in Canada, using Canadian employees, and using Canadian research facilities, then we will get a win. It doesn't necessarily have to be a home-grown Canadian company for it to be good for the Canadian economy; it can also be an investment from Europe, and reciprocally we do the same thing as well. Bombardier bought Adtranz, as an example--