We've had no interest in the European markets over the past few years because we have been quite successful in Canada and North America.
Again, as I said, with what has happened with the U.S. over the past several years, with the exchange rates and their economy suffering and the buy American provisions, that has pointed us in a different direction. There has been a lot of activity in Canada in construction and building and infrastructure, so we've been quite busy and quite successful doing that.
We are starting to see that European and Asian companies are making inroads into Alberta and also into Newfoundland, and even projects here in Nova Scotia. They are starting to have a look. With Labrador, for example, there are a lot of European companies supplying goods and services up there. These are not small projects. They're billion dollar projects, where a lot of goods and services are coming from outside of Canada. They could have been done here in Canada, but they're simply being purchased outside because there is no real trade agreement to prevent that.