We actually have taken a very conservative definition. The definition of the industry as having 41,000 people employed today is within innovation-based firms, which doesn't include project developers, the engineering firms, or the departments of renewable energy within the utilities. It's a very small core. These are the firms that have intellectual property that they will commercialize and therefore be in a position to export. So it's a very small core definition. Therefore, the overall footprint of the industry is in the order of four or five times greater, because that's the supply chain and all of the services that go around it.
In terms of the international development, I think this government has done a wise thing, which is to bring the development department, CIDA, within the then DFAIT.
There is an opportunity to increase the awareness within the department about the solutions we have to offer that have to do with water and energy, and with stopping pollution of the air and the earth.
So that's the next step. I think we need to consider this, and it may be in the context of the mining industry, where every mine needs its own energy and its own water, and where those facilities need to be managed in a sustainable way.