Yes. Thank you. The IRA is certainly an issue that I think a lot of committees are looking at. We're looking at it on the international trade committee as well. I think it is a serious issue because of the vast amounts of government money being out there for all sorts of things, including building materials, as you say.
Now, the advantage that Canada has with wood, for instance, is that we are the leaders in engineered wood and mass timber construction in North America. I mentioned Structurlam, a company in Penticton. They have a facility in Arkansas. They moved south of the border some years ago in order to expand, but the trees used in these products are in Canada for the most part. We have that advantage, but I think Canada as a whole has to really double down on anything that would create the climate to take on the IRA. Whether it's in natural resources or in clean-tech products, we have to be very cognizant of that and do much more than we're doing now.
The one thing I will mention about mass timber products is that we can ship them to the United States and export them without tariffs under the softwood lumber agreement. It's a manufactured product, so it's not hit by those tariffs. There's an opportunity for increased market there.