Thank you for the question. It's a very good point. Any time an energy efficiency project is undertaken, of course it requires equipment, but it also requires the skills and the knowledge and the know-how that go along with it—the skills to choose the right equipment, to install it properly, to operate it properly—and those are very highly technical, highly specialized skills that Canada does have. I think we do have the potential to help out.
There are some challenges, though. Those skills are also in high demand in North America. As was mentioned earlier in a previous question, it is easier to do business in Canada or in the United States than it is in other countries, particularly for some small companies.
I realize the Chevrons, Shells and ExxonMobils of the world are more comfortable going into newer geographies, but the small companies that might have 10, 20, or 30 engineers, and that might be the world's expert at a certain area of energy efficiency, are probably more nervous going into those areas. They would need some help. I think they would need to understand the economic potential, the economic gains they could get from going in, but I think they would need some help on how to navigate the system, to take some of the risk out of doing that. But we definitely have the skills to build the export, for sure.