I'd just like to say that I began my career in steel defending the industry against unfair trade, and I spent a great deal of time in my career defending the softwood lumber industry in British Columbia, so your question brings me happy memories, both professional and personal.
The short answer is that we should be doing everything yesterday. The challenge we have in Canada is not just access to the U.S. market, which is always under some sort of stress. We heard just yesterday President Trump saying that Canada is being subsidized to the tune of $100 billion, and so on and so forth. This is on top of all the tariff threats, so there is that angle.
The other thing that we obviously have to worry about is the subsidy measures in the United States. On the one hand, our access to the U.S. is under threat. On the other hand, our competitiveness in the U.S. and globally is under threat as a result of those measures, which says to me that, even though we obviously have very limited capacity to constantly compete with U.S. subsidies, we really do need to be alive to those challenges and, where we can, match them.