I want to recognize Pamela Goldsmith-Jones, my extraordinary parliamentary secretary. She's been a key champion of all our missions, particularly the women's trade mission. We will have one in Detroit this month. This is not the first trade mission led by a woman in Canada's history, but it's certainly a very important one. At the same time, we announced that we will have the first ever LGBTQ2 trade mission in Philadelphia later this month, and we will have the first indigenous trade mission in Canada's history coming up in New Zealand, at the indigenous congress.
The reason is very simple. Whilst we do trade missions, which are focused on sectors—I did one with the Prime Minister in Paris where it was about artificial intelligence and green technologies—at the same time we want to make sure that everyone has a seat at the table, that everyone gets the benefit of international trade and gets to learn about these agreements and the potential they offer. Our job, my job, is to convert paper into prosperity, to convert these agreements into jobs, into book orders, into opportunities for people. We realized that there were some people who were under-represented in international trade, and we're trying to address that proactively. At the same time, we're doing trade missions and favouring the sectors we know—I've been talking about our clusters, whether it's artificial intelligence, ocean technology, plant proteins, the digital economy—making sure Canada is known for both its natural resources and the superclusters that we have established and will favour significant investment.