Thank you for the question.
It is complex, and it depends on what chemistries or what products you're involved with. Certainly, I think there is an effort to improve the resiliency of supply chains, and those of you in municipalities are going to see a significant demand for industrial lands that are being converted to warehousing to make sure we have.... Let's just say that it's broadly moving away from just-in-time delivery.
If you look at our chemistry industry, again, as the third-largest manufacturer, the truth is that the bulk of that activity, that $80 billion a year, is commodity exports of very resource-rich, low-carbon assets that the rest of the world doesn't have access to. We're exporting those—60 billion dollars' worth—and we're importing 60 billion dollars' worth of specialized chemicals and other comparable goods. The trade is balanced. We're sending the things that we're good at and that the rest of the world needs, and we're taking back products that typically have a lot more labour involved with them.
I don't think that's going to change, and I think the world and Canada would be harmed if there was an effort to become truly self-sufficient, this notion that we should only make the things we need. The world needs what we make, and we have a duty to get it to them, and in exchange for having all the great trade agreements that Canada has negotiated over the last few decades, we get to take advantage of the things they have that we need.
I'm cautious about saying too much, other than that there's a lot of work under way to improve resiliency, and that's largely moving away from the just-in-time delivery to more warehousing and larger inventories to take care of some of the challenges we've seen in recent months and years.
Others may feel differently.