Sure.
Thank you very much for your question. I was starting to feel a bit neglected with all the questions going to other companies.
But joking aside, the recreational product division of Bombardier was spun off from the company a few years ago. Now it's a separate company. I'm not really in a position to comment on that, but it is part and parcel of the history of Bombardier. The company was built upon this great invention in the thirties and forties, but the company has evolved through acquisitions into other sectors, such as rail and aerospace, and a few years ago that division was spun off.
But on your other question about policies and maybe the ecosystem to support greater innovation in Canada, and more broadly speaking from our experience in other countries, what we would recommend here in Canada is that, I think maybe simply put, we can put measures in two different baskets. On the one side, it would be more the technology-push kind of policies to support the commercialization of technologies. I think there are some great programs afoot here in Canada that have been in existence for some time in the aerospace sector, in the rail sector or, more broadly speaking, in the clean technology sector. We have been able to benefit from some of these programs. We have partnered with others to tap into those programs and move forward some projects in the area of clean technology. Some other programs we haven't really yet benefited from. Examples would include the GARDN program that I referred to. This was an NSERC program. Unfortunately, there was a decision made last year not to pursue this program anymore. It was a question of priorities, we understand, but the biofuel project that I mentioned was partially funded by this program.
Another program I would flag is sustainable development Technology Partnerships Canada. We're in discussions with them over possible potential projects we may work with them on. We have MOUs in place with this organization as an early adopter of some of the technologies that they're developing or funding with the participation of other companies. So that would be on the technology-push side.
For the PRIMOVE technology that we referred to, there's a pilot project that we're currently discussing with the Société de transport de Montréal. Policies to support the deployment of technologies for demonstration projects would also be a policy that we see elsewhere such as Germany. PRIMOVE is being deployed in Germany as well on a pilot-project basis, and it could be a policy that the government may wish to consider further to push forward the innovation agenda.
The other basket of policies would be more on the demand-pull side. I'm talking about strategic procurement, so leveraging procurement or public investment in either infrastructure projects or procurement of products and services to drive innovation and domestic manufacturing capabilities here in Canada. I think one great example is Public Works' Canadian innovation commercialization program that targets specific sectors, including clean technologies.
I think there's scope for the government to maybe expand that kind of program going forward and really use investment in public infrastructure projects as a tool, as a policy lever, to drive innovation. Of course, you have to do it in a way that provides value for money for taxpayers, but maybe in the way projects are spec'd you could leave more scope and latitude to the potential suppliers to provide innovation solutions for more sustainable and smart infrastructure here in Canada.