Thank you so much to all of you for being here. It's such an important study.
Some of the key things that you've been hitting on are, of course, how environmentally clean Canadian steel is and the good jobs it supports. In my riding of Essex, there's Atlas Tube, which was mentioned—a wonderful employer in a small community. The spinoff from those jobs sustains that community. It's so incredibly important.
The other thing I've heard from all of you is innovation. You're innovating; you're constantly moving forward. With all the infrastructure projects that are coming with the government, what ideally I think we'd all like to see is all of you operating at top capacity, employing people to the highest level, sustaining all the communities that you're part of.
My question is going to be, not surprisingly, to my own chamber president, Matt Marchand, from Windsor-Essex. I represent the riding of Essex, and we've had many conversations and done some work together around steel dumping and how we address this issue. Something that came up today, modernizing our trade remedy system, is number one. We have to do that. There was a report that came out of the finance committee to do so, and we need the government to implement that so we can start that remedy to come in line with other countries.
The second thing, really, is about China. It's about the market economy status, and it's about the impact of them receiving that. This is a very pertinent issue. Of course, you all know it's sitting right now at the WTO. Could you speak to the impact there would be on producers, like Atlas Tube, in our own area if China were to achieve market economy status?