Canada actually has a long history of maritime surveillance capability. We were one of the pioneers in the underwater autonomous vehicle sector. Halifax and several technology start-ups and more established companies here have quite a bit of very useful technology that is dual purpose and is used for civilian purposes to survey underwater pipelines and so forth. With the application of a passive sonar array, we now have UAVs capable of travelling up to 2,000 nautical miles, give or take, semi-autonomously, powered by AI and feeding information back into mother ships or ground-based stations.
If we are going to surveil and maintain active surveillance across a large area like the Arctic, then yes, absolutely we are going to lean more heavily on underwater autonomous or above-water autonomous vehicles using artificial intelligence and various sensor systems that Canada is actually in a good position to provide right now.