Yes. Thank you very much.
In Sault Ste. Marie, we're changing from a coal process to an electric arc process, which is like taking a million cars off the road. It's anchoring Algoma Steel in the community for generations to come, and I really appreciate that as well. The other thing is that hydroelectricity is the reason the steel plant is where it is, and I like the point you highlighted on that. Hopefully, we can continue to work forward.
In terms of what you mentioned in your speech, you talked about a few things, including how you can get some things in Canada and you can get some things in the United States. Sault Ste. Marie is also a border town, so I know that full well. I went to university in Michigan. The students would be asking me for various things, like Smarties, and I didn't know at the time that you couldn't get them in the United States.
Could you expand a little on that in terms of what there could be some collaboration on—not using Smarties as an example, but other things as well—where we'd have opportunities for Canadian goods and products to get into the United States to satisfy the wants of American consumers?