It affects us quite badly on plate items.
As I mentioned before, in some of our projects, we're competing against offshore fabricators, and offshore fabricators do not have to worry about, for example, the tariffs on fabricated steel coming into Canada. At least some countries are not affected by the countervailing duties. Vietnam, for example, is exporting steel into Canada for the Baffinland project. We bid on structural steel there, and we were not successful. It went to Vietnam.
We're bidding on another bridge project for Baffinland. Again, the plate size is 20 metres long. It would be greater than two and three-quarters inches in thickness. There's bridge plate A709 that Algoma has difficulty producing because of the hydrogen embrittlement, so we will have to buy those plates in the United States. It means we will have to pay 25% more on a third of our costs on that project, and we will probably be competing against fabricated steel coming in from offshore fabricators. It makes it very difficult for us to compete.