That's a good question. Thank you.
To the first part of the question, I'm a veterinarian by training. I have taught in Prince Edward Island. I have visited that beautiful college in Truro, Nova Scotia. Specifically that college has made contributions to agri-food policy in our country in a significant way. I'm very proud of the work that happened at Nova Scotia Agricultural College, which is now part of Dalhousie University. It's truly a jewel in our country.
The colleges across the country are connected already through a deans council, which meets every third or fourth month. I used to be a member of that council. We would exchange ideas, programmatic information and information on how to work together with federal and provincial jurisdictions.
The second part of your question was at what stage. It's never too early, because sometimes it is having an eye on the discovery of new knowledge that makes a difference. How do we protect that intellectual property? How do we put a patent on it? Before it disappears anywhere else, how do we work with the private sector to mobilize it?
That's where, respectfully, I was making the case of speeding up our education system for graduate students and new professors, to sensitize them to the idea of intellectual property, because that would be a multi-billion dollar enterprise coming out of that piece.
Radioisotopes—