I'll give an example.
We convened about 12 to 15 industries along the battery supply chain, from metals and minerals right through recycling at end of life. Our recommendations to government were several.
First and foremost, they are doing good jobs in certain parts of the value and supply chain, and then completely ignoring others. You have NRCan and you have ISED. You have Minister Champagne landing battery deals in Ontario and Quebec. That's excellent, but what we're saying is that without a holistic approach, you're going to miss the opportunity, and that is labour supply, skills training, building the infrastructure to get the critical minerals, building the infrastructure to get the electricity to these new plants, and then actually moving to a clean grid.
All the things we've actually talked about here are all important, and they are the parts that aren't happening right now. That is in addition to things like whether we need more production tax credits and whether we need to get moving quickly on this, but there is an entire vacuum that needs to get filled and recognized and acknowledged.
Canada can do it. It's just a matter of getting the right people in the room to move it forward.