I'll try to be succinct this time.
I totally agree with you. I think there's a strong opportunity for some of the experience that Albertans and people across the Prairies, frankly, including B.C., have built around LNG infrastructure and oil and gas, both heavy and light. A lot of that skill can be translated for use in carbon capture and storage. A lot of it can go toward decarbonizing industrial sources, such as coal-powered plants, which unfortunately are still going in many parts of Asia.
We've already seen that some of this is happening in terms of how that could be used as a way of creating a trade surplus. The key there is creating business models where the know-how can be taken over. Stantec, one of the largest engineering companies in the world, is based in Edmonton. By leveraging some of the partnerships and technologies that they have with start-ups like ours.... This is not necessarily just Stantec. It's also other Canadian engineering firms, such as Hatch. They can be great catalysts for bringing these technologies out to such regions as China, Indonesia and other areas and essentially help these specific organizations there create the new plants—essentially, the modern versions of an ethylene cracker or a distillation column—and start creating royalty-based structures where the know-how can actually be moved from Canada over to these areas.
We think that will be the future. We cannot be taking Chinese carbon emissions and capturing them in Canada, but we can take the technology over there and create those long-term business relationships.