Sure.
As you've said, there's activity everywhere. I think there's quite a big rare earths play in Australia at the moment. Also, there's been a lot of interest in lithium there as well.
When you look around the world, you can see that the world's geological deposits aren't evenly distributed. We go to the countries where the minerals are, and every country has its comparative advantages because of that.
When I look at Canada, I think Canada has some unique advantages when you think about the future. We are finding a lot of these critical minerals within our ore bodies that we're exploiting already, so I think just continuing with that type of work, as I've explained.... Also, when we start to think about steel-making for the future, for example, and the zero-carbon steel-making process, this is something that's of big interest to us as a company, because we provide a lot of iron ore. One of the best iron ore deposits that's best suited to those future steel-making technologies exists in Newfoundland and Labrador at Iron Ore of Canada.
You can see that there are these sorts of relative comparative advantages, and they're geological in nature.