That's a great question, and great points, actually. The reality is that when you manufacture in a particular country, you don't want to move your manufacturing plant. You want to keep it there for the duration of the product's lifetime because it costs a lot of money to move it around. [Technical difficulty—Editor], it stays in our country.
For instance, Dr. Eaves's company, which is trying to manufacture in Canada, is not going to go anywhere else because he has the infrastructure here and the personnel here. By building that kind of biomanufacturing infrastructure in Canada, we're going to anchor companies in Canada. They're going to stay here, people are going to be trained to work in those companies and we're going to generate for the economy. I think that's really important.
What we often do is have our stuff manufactured offshore, and as you suggest, that can have an impact on supply chains as well. There are so many reasons why it makes a lot of sense to build in Canada, and build biomanufacturing in particular, so we can provide products for our own patients.