Yes.
The last time we ran out of time because I went on a long time and Carol didn't get to provide the details. So I'll keep it very short.
Suffice to say that, yes, there's a lot of interest and work being done on the issue of oil spills, and there are two tracks. One is to make sure we do everything we can to prevent them—collectively. It isn't just Environment Canada; it's across governments—federal, provincial. Are we doing everything we can to prevent them? And then, are we also making the necessary plans so that in the event something happens, we minimize the environmental impact from it?
For our part in Environment Canada, the point you raised, the research we're doing—which isn't completed yet, but we hope to be completing it soon—is looking at bitumen. We have a lot of information about how conventional oil might behave if it were spilled. We're trying to get the information up to that level for bitumen, which may or may not react differently. We want to understand the properties and what would happen, and then be best placed to deal with a spill if it ever did happen. So that research will be our contribution into that effort, which as you say, goes from the types of ships that are there to a whole bunch of other areas that are really being led by others.
Carol, is there anything further that you wanted to add on the specifics of those dollars that you didn't get a chance to?