To Germany I would add Japan and Korea, which are also very significant markets. We're well positioned to service them from B.C., as we're well positioned to serve the European market out of Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. It's an enormous opportunity.
We are already exporting. We're exporting hydrogen, as we are clean chemicals. We're using our clean hydrogen to produce such things as methanol and exporting that, and ammonia. We also have two major clean liquid hydrogen plants in Quebec that are exporting hydrogen down to the U.S. as we speak. It is certainly a very large opportunity. We need to be tackling it as a nation, developing the brand for Canada, and showing that we are in the market seriously.
We can look at what Australia has done. Australia has no further advantage than Canada in terms of production capability of clean hydrogen. They've positioned themselves globally as being the preferred destination. They have come out and said, “We're your supplier. We're willing to do what it takes to get you the clean hydrogen that you're going to need.” I think Canada needs to take a page from that book. They need to be responsive to their customers. If customers want hydrogen derived from renewable power, we need to make that and to make that available. We're well positioned to do that. If they are looking for the lowest-cost clean hydrogen, we can do that with our fossil fuel hydrogen.
I think we are well positioned to do it, but we really need to start working together, not targeting one type of hydrogen or another but targeting clean hydrogen and reacting to what our customers want. I think we can do that. Now, I would—