I think one of the key things here is commercialization.
There's a lot of what we call lower TRL—technology readiness level—or very initial-stage R & D that takes place in Canada, but then, after it passes this initial stage, it goes through something called the valley of death, which means that it's very difficult to productize this R & D here in Canada.
There are very few programs, for instance, that support Canadian companies to help launch initial products to test them and get them to market, while in the United States, for example—of course, U.S. government procurement budgets are much larger—their procurement process is much more agile. They have systems in place to help companies get through that valley of death to help commercialize their products.
One of the suggestions that we put forward with the Canadian Chamber of Commerce was to establish a Canadian commercialization fund that would help Canadian companies move towards that productization.
The Canada innovation corporation, which was announced in the 2022 budget, may be a start, but we have yet to have very much detail about that. We're hopeful that the whole commercialization question there, which will help commercialized products here in Canada keep IP in Canada, would be a key aspect to that question.