Not only do I agree with you, Mr. Angus, but we're actually endeavouring to put that into place.
At the end of the day, any strategy relies on comparative advantages, and Canada has a number of those. That means you need a critical minerals strategy, you need a hydrogen strategy, you need a biofuel strategy and you need a strategy with respect to things like small modular reactors. Collectively, those are the key underpinnings of a broader industrial strategy.
Part of that is national and part of that is regional. The regional tables are essentially about developing place-based economic strategies to ensure that Alberta succeeds and Nova Scotia succeeds, almost certainly in different areas.