That's what we hope. Again, we can't predict the future. Our stance at CSPA, and this is confirmed, basically, by all of the leadership of the steel sector across Canada, is that we need to demonstrate the best and prepare for the worst as it pertains to Canada-U.S.
Demonstrating the best is doing exactly what we've been doing to maintain that trajectory. There are section 53 tariffs, which do two things: they help us domestically and also demonstrate the positive to the U.S. There's the “melted and poured” tool that we've been describing and the anti-circumvention changes that we have yet to do.
Certainly, if there is any sort of opening on a foreign pollution tariff or some other pollution measure at the border that the U.S. starts to signal, it would be our hope that we would step into that fulsomely and discuss, describe and negotiate with the U.S. one that's like a North American or at least a Canada-U.S. approach to this problem to do exactly what you're describing. We really hope that we do that.