Absolutely. We do some work with a company on Vancouver Island that exports to an Asian country. I won't say which one because it's proprietary knowledge. They have taken their business from about a $50-million-a-year business to $100 million a year of export. They're providing unionized, good-paying jobs in Vancouver Island. For them, the tariffs that would come off in Japan, in particular, and in Malaysia would.... As they've explained to us, they're prepared to put people on the ground today if they get a signal from government that it was going to be a positive response, or the government would make the decision. They're already looking at markets and growing their business because they're not going to grow it in North America. It's just not going to happen. Obviously, when we look at the situation with the softwood lumber dispute, shall we say, with the United States, our orientation is to look towards Asia as opposed to elsewhere in North America to grow markets, because they're saturated.
But, yes, there are companies here. The other one we would look at as well is in clean technology. Obviously, as the investment in oil and gas wanes, as there's a shift there to other sources of lower carbon fuel, they're beginning to look at other markets. And you can take waste-water treatment and export it to countries in situations where waste-water treatment is necessary. Currently the tariffs are impossible for us to do that. Under the TPP, that would change. It doesn't mean it will go, but it would obviously take away one of those large barriers.