Sure.
Steelworkers are in all kinds of industries, from your cup of coffee at Starbucks to the steel in your car. We represent members in all kinds of industries.
As I said at the beginning, with this trade, but certainly not exclusively, steel, potash and our workers in the energy sector would be particularly impacted. Again, trade back and forth with steel production in Ukraine is important. We've had some cases recently of, and concerns about—as I said earlier—dumping of steel from Ukraine here in Canada. We are trying to make sure we can get that slowed down.
As I said, with steel in particular.... We're very proud to have some of the lowest carbon-emitting steel in the world. That is something for which, I think, Canada has a value-add that we can share in order to export our steel more and continue to support that industry here in Canada. That would include exports to Ukraine but also, absolutely, particularly with a country such as Ukraine, in what we hope is soon to be a postwar era, it's supporting their domestic attempts to decarbonize. I was speaking to some of the other members of the committee about that earlier today. That is something we could certainly help with, but we also want to make sure that, through this, we're not facilitating any further dumping.
Again, these agreements allow us to support our own industries and share our expertise globally.