I'm going to let Michelle comment as well on the opportunities for Canada in services sectors.
But there's a couple that leap to mind, on the basis of the meetings I attended with the minister. The first would be with respect to education.
The minister responsible for education told Minister Fast that because of the very young Indian population, the demographics are the mirror image of Canada's. They are in need of something like.... It's a bit hard to imagine, but the figure that was used was that they need another 1,000 universities and 40,000 to 50,000 new colleges. It's hard to even compute those kinds of numbers.
This is just to say that if it's a half of that or a quarter of that, it's an extraordinary opportunity for providing educational services to the Indian market. I can tell you that there is an awful lot of activity by Canadian universities, Canadian colleges, and some Canadian private sector educational institutions, such as language schools, etc., to seek business in the Indian market.
It was striking.
The second opportunity is in all of the services related to infrastructure, where Canada is so strong, particularly in transportation infrastructure. Bombardier and SNC-Lavalin are leading the charge, but there's a lot of opportunity for smaller firms, particularly firms that can bring new technology to a partnership in India. They talk about the need to create 200 new cities. As people move from rural areas into cities, it can't be just the existing stock of cities. They are creating an industrial corridor from Delhi to Mumbai. I think the focus there is sort of 20 new cities focused on specific economic sectors. That kind of scale of opportunity for engineering, for architectural services, and for transportation services is kind of staggering.
Those are the two that leap to mind.
Michelle?