Absolutely, there are rules they must meet. For every transaction that EDC does, it must pass through our Canadian benefits gate, so it must measure up in terms of the benefits it will deliver to Canada. To give you a quick summary, last year we estimate—I use that term carefully, because we don't know to the decimal point—conservatively that over five cents out of every dollar earned in Canada was generated by transactions of companies using EDC services. We're very careful about why we are engaged in a transaction.
In the simplest case, there's a Canadian export and a foreign buyer needing financing in order to pay for that export. Then it's very direct. It's what we would call a direct bilateral loan, and we lend the money to the foreign buyer. In effect, we hold the mortgage on the thing that they've bought from Canada, and the Canadian benefit is very clear.
At the other end of the spectrum, where I was talking about creating trade, you will see us facilitate some trade. When someone wants to sell something and someone wants to buy something, we can fill the gap and put the financing in place to facilitate that transaction. At the other end, which I mentioned in my remarks, we're creating trade. What we've done there is build a relationship up with a major foreign buyer. It could be something like Tata Communications, for example, in India. We could have a financial relationship with them before the exports actually occur, but they have signed a promise to develop their Canadian procurement. They would already have Canadian companies who regularly supply them, so we already have the evidence that they're able to do this and that they are in the right space for Canadian companies. Then we would put our efforts, along with our trade commissioner colleagues, into finding the right Canadian companies; they are often small ones that really need this kind of assistance. We introduce them and build off that procurement list.
I remember that when we first started talking to Codelco in Chile, there were half a dozen Canadian companies that they routinely bought from; now there are more than 100. That's the kind of creating new trade that we think is very worthwhile, and that's where your trade commissioner is really doing most of the heavy lifting.