I can answer quickly. First, there will be a fast transition toward electric mobility. We've seen that with personal computers. Thirty years ago hardly anybody had a personal computer. Twenty years ago, who had Internet? Ten years ago, how many people had a smartphone? The switch will be exponential, as we've seen with those technologies.
If we want to be ahead to embrace the switch to cleaner technologies, we have to understand that these 560,000 jobs that we're talking about in clean mobility, clean energy, will be in assembly. We've seen that. There was an announcement last fall from Ford, Chrysler and GM. Workers in these assembly plants will be retooling and will be retrained so they can start assembling electric vehicles. That's one part.
There's also the part in research and development. We have to emphasize research and development on electric mobility, on critical minerals and metals. We have to make sure that people see there's great potential for infrastructure deployment as well. However, there are some issues with infrastructure because you don't need the same infrastructure when you're at home, for instance, than when you are in downtown Montreal, Calgary or Toronto. We will need to do research and development to make sure we can make a clean transition. All that will be part of the job transition.
Plus selling an electric vehicle is not the same as selling a gas vehicle, I can tell you that because I was the first amalgamated trainer in Quebec regarding electric vehicles, so I trained a lot of people. People have to know how to operate the electric vehicles, whether they're light or heavy duty. We will need to do courses for high school, colleges and universities. These are all new jobs. We've been talking to many colleges and universities over the past few months, because they're looking at new programs to help train and educate these people so that we have the future engineers and the future chemists.
[Technical difficulty—Editor] but the federal government and the provinces have to be in tune with that transition. The Trudeau government said they wanted to create more than a million jobs in clean technologies. We have to make sure we are there to help not only the future workers but the present workers.