It was a devastating situation for the industry. It's one of the reasons for the CUSMA review and also the broader trade relationship between Canada and the U.S. We think it's timely and very important to take a very close look at what the big signals are that we can send to the current and future U.S. government, whatever form it might take. We're very serious about trade. We never want to find ourselves in that situation again.
What we want to do is make sure we are matching and keeping pace in our trade remedy system and beyond, to ensure we can look the U.S. in the eye and say, “We are real partners with you” and doing all those things together to protect Canada-U.S. trade flows, which, as you put it, are so highly integrated. That's the rationale now that the U.S. has come out with so strongly on the section 301 tariffs and across the supply chain. We obviously aren't here to talk about the other aspects of that. From the steel perspective, we think that's very important for Canada to look at.
There are threats on our industry all the time. We learned some pretty hard lessons in that period. We have to prevent them from ever happening again.