I have one or two comments.
One is that the nuclear power building industry has been very cyclical, and the last two decades have been a low part of that cycle. CANDU went through a good period of building in the 1990s to the 2000s, and then subsequent to that, there has been a slackening in sales of nuclear reactors all over the world with a couple of exceptions. The exceptions are China, India, and, to a lesser extent, Russia.
Those are countries that build reactors as much as possible based on their own domestic supply chain. Although India is importing designs, it's trying to have the maximum amount of work done on reactors within India. China has been a very strong proponent of nuclear power and is building literally dozens of nuclear power plants today. That's a tremendous market, but it is dominated by Chinese industries and organizations.
Canada, as a middle power, doesn't have the kind of market power that some of our neighbours to the south, the U.S., or countries like France, which have a very monolithic nuclear industry, have had in making sales. I'm not sure whether that's a good thing or a bad thing; it's a fact of life.
I believe that the likely future of nuclear sales around the world is that they will increase a great deal. The response to climate change is one driver, but the recognition of the reliability and the maturity these days of nuclear power will be another driver.