From the get-go, when Canada announced that goal and the Prime Minister made that commitment and reiterated it in the budget, we made it clear that the ambition was looking at the full suite. It's not just resource extraction, but looking at processing and transmission all the way to batteries and vehicles.
For the strategic plan that was announced, the Canadian critical minerals strategy, $3.8 billion has all of those economic supports present. It's been vetted in the House and approved, and the work is under way to make it happen.
It would be hard to summarize in one minute how the $3.8 billion will be disbursed, but it goes across the entire value chain. Right now, there is a lot of emphasis on international collaboration to try to speed up technologies to extract the resource in a way that is environmentally friendly. We do not want to replicate the approach that has been used in other countries, like China, so that we can minimize the impact on land, air and water. There is a lot of good work happening with the Americans, the Japanese and the Europeans on this right now.