Canada is enviable. We used to be able to say that we were the only G7 country with a free trade agreement with every other G7 country, but now we're the first because others have joined that as well. We continue to negotiate agreements because, I think now more than ever, the rules-based international order and the rules that govern trade are what investors and businesses are looking for. They're good for businesses, and they're good for workers. Rules matter because they give predictability and certainty to businesses and to investors. Canada is so well placed for that as a country that respects the rule of law, particularly around open and free trade under a rules-based system.
However, having a strong North American competitive trading bloc, together with those countries and those trading partners in Asia—including Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Vietnam and Malaysia—and then the entire European Union means that Canada is in this well-positioned place. I talk to countless investors and businesses that look to Canada as a destination to invest in, to grow in and to partner with because of our access to a number of trade agreements. It is also the incredible talent that we have in this country. It is the excellent investment environment that we have, particularly for the economy of the future, that has a greater reliance on services and a greater reliance on solutions that will actually deal with climate change. They're solutions that, on the one hand, deal with climate change but actually also will grow those incredibly innovative entrepreneurs and businesses—I know that you have a bunch of them—certainly all across Canada.