I'll give you one example. Promation is a company that was....This is the other part of the opportunity, because it's at a time when we're coming out of a recession. The oil sands provide an opportunity for many companies to transition from auto, for example, that isn't doing as well, to supplying for the energy sector.
Promation was a welding shop in Mississauga, Ontario. As a result of the recession, they were looking at other customers. They started doing a very unique type of welding in pressure vessels, originally for the oil sands. From that, they've developed the world's only automated welding technology for pressure vessels. That's now being used throughout the nuclear sector. That's where their biggest exports are coming from right now. That's an example of how a company, through the opportunity of supplying the oil sands, has really developed a very unique product, a unique technology, and has not only kept itself open but is now growing on the basis of this very specialized technology.
We have a number of examples. I have to say, though, that I see a difference between manufacturing in southern Ontario and manufacturing in northern Ontario and in Quebec. That's something I hear about quite a bit from oil sands companies and engineering companies. The companies that have traditionally supplied the auto sector are used to providing high-volume, small-scale, and precision-made parts. For the oil sands, it's a different type of business. Usually these are big-scale, small-volume, and very specialized types of manufacturing parts or equipment. One thing I hear is that it's more difficult for a company in southern Ontario to make that transition. It's easier for some of the manufacturers in Quebec or in northern Ontario that are more used to the project type of development.
We can't take a look at manufacturing in broad strokes. We have to look at what drives investment decisions and where the relative opportunities are, but I can tell you that companies like Promation—