I take note that you will be in Panama in the next two weeks, particularly looking at the City of Knowledge. We are very pleased with that.
We've talked about agricultural goods at length because that's the main export that Panama has. Please bear in mind that 75% of our GDP is services and 6% is agriculture. When it comes to agricultural exports, Panama is one of those countries that you can map out really easily: it's tropical fruits and a little less....
As for industrial goods, this agreement will definitely improve market access for things coming from the Canadian industry, such as iron and steel products, aircraft and parts, plastics and wood products, including plywood, motor vehicles, electrical machinery, fish and seafood products, glass and glassware, construction equipment, information technology products, and medical and scientific equipment.
Again, as a market of 3.5 million, it sounds very small, but when you think of these major projects that demand a lot of industrial goods, it becomes a much larger market. When you think of, for example, medical equipment, you think of medical tourism. We are building new and very modern hospitals. John Hopkins, for example, has an extension in Panama. It's a state-of-the-art private hospital, and it's actually importing a lot of medical equipment.
On issues such as energy, we are very aggressive in terms of energy and mining. But in energy we're also looking at the region, with great investments in—