Thanks for the question.
You have to understand that the western ports serve, yes, B.C. and the Canadian economy but also the U.S. economy.
When you look just on the container side, the movement is about 40% for B.C. About 30% of everything that is moved through containers at the port is for the rest of Canada and another 30% goes to the U.S. It's mainly to the Midwest, where the manufacturing sector and the auto sector are. That's an important piece of context. This strike is not just affecting a region; it's affecting the economy and the North American market in that regard.
In terms of the areas that have been affected, the auto sector has clearly been an affected area. We were monitoring the situation with Canadian and also with U.S. companies to get a sense. Usually they have a bit of an inventory, which allows them to basically continue their full production. They start to really feel the impacts, I would say, after five to seven days. Within a week of disruption, they can manage without too many impacts in terms of the production side.
However, given the length of this one, clearly there has been some realignment of the production in the Canadian and U.S. auto sector.