Thanks.
Mr. Stanford, as you testified, and as we know, Unifor has significant union membership in a variety of private sector industries, such as seafood processing, pulp and paper, wood products, and aerospace. Those sectors have testified before this committee in the past, and they're uniformly optimistic that this trade deal will increase their competitiveness in the Korean market and make up the ground lost since KORUS and the EU-Korea deals were implemented.
Jim Quick from the aerospace association said that Canadian aerospace exports to Korea had dropped 80% after the EU and U.S. deals were implemented, because of the tariff reductions. Also, aircraft demand in Asia is slated to require 12,000 aircraft totalling $1.9 trillion over the next 20 years, which excites companies like Bombardier.
Does Unifor see any job gains in other sectors that you represent as a result of this deal, such as aerospace, for instance?