I'd like to close my remarks with a few observations on strategic autonomy, recognising that security and prosperity today extend well beyond the traditional areas of food, energy and defence, important as they are, to include space based communications, semiconductors, digital sovereignty, critical minerals, independent payment systems, clean energy and vaccines. And our strategic imperative is to build these sovereign capabilities with the most trusted partners, and that creates enormous opportunities for partnership between Canada and Europe. We view ourselves as highly complementary to your economic and security goals. That's demonstrated through the work we're doing with the presidencies on the new EU-Canada strategic partnership of the future, building deeper relationships from digital to defense, supply chains to security. We're honored to be the first non-European country as part of the EU SAFE initiative. We would observe that in the last year we have struck $18 billion worth of critical minerals deals across 20 of the world's leading critical minerals. The way to look at this is we are warehousing these to look for government-to-government deals with our close partners and under the rubric of the G7 first and foremost, but then more broadly. We're working with European partners across the technology stack. from hardware, cloud infrastructure, artificial intelligence, and space.