Thank you for the question.
I'll speak for aluminum, because our markets are totally different. They're structured differently. The pricing is different. The cross-border DNA of the industry is very different. When I said at the outset that we are totally against quota, quota is one of the worst things that can happen to Canada, in terms of aluminum production. It hinders growth. It maintains a very strong layer of uncertainty. You know when it starts. You don't know when it ends. You don't know what's waiting for you after. It increases the price for everybody in North America, which is very bad, because it creates inflation in a metal industry, and it plays into the hands of foreign suppliers.
Some people say that other countries have accepted quotas. I'm not sure they accepted them, and when they accepted them, I'm not sure they were very conscious of what is happening. You can ask South Korea how they feel about the quotas that they—quote, unquote—“accepted”. It's like the morning after for them right now.