I would say an unequivocal yes and the business environment in Canada has consistently over decades been rated among the best in the world.
That relates to some fundamental factors that have been very stable. Those are: the rule of law; an excellent public service that has incredibly low levels of corruption, which companies frankly face in other jurisdictions; an excellent business tax structure, an income tax structure that taxes the right things, which are consumption and after-profit income, and really puts an emphasis on job creation.
Again, consistently over time we've seen successive Canadian governments and certainly Prime Minister Harper's government committed to opening new markets.
The Canada-EU trade agreement would be emblematic of that. It is, of course, not yet ratified by our Parliament nor the European Commission, European Parliament, and member states. For us that's the focus, for example, over the next 18 months, to see that agreement get over the goal line.
Right now it's theoretical. Just like NAFTA presented a huge opportunity to us two decades ago, we see Canada as having really done the hard work on knitting together what could be a trans-Atlantic marketplace given that Mexico has a free trade agreement with the EU. It needs to be brought up to the Canadian standard and then we can help our American friends with their agreement with the EU.