Thank you very much for the question.
I think the first thing that would be very important for both our governments is to develop a familiarity with the drones themselves. Canada's participation in our drone programs in Afghanistan was pretty strong. As Canadian military officials become comfortable with drones, I think that will be helpful.
Second, we are starting to see more drones in the civilian space as law enforcement uses drones to monitor situations, whether it's public protests or other things, just to get that eye in the sky that we used to use helicopters for. Being aware of that is very important.
Third, we've started to see drones that creep into airport locations, where they could pose a threat to civilian airliners. We saw an incident like that in Vancouver just last year. With those particular incidents, we'll have to think about what effective countermeasures need to be taken, and we'll have to think about domestic regulation. Should you have a licence to pilot a drone? Should you need permission to operate a drone in domestic airspace in the same way you would need a licence to fly a plane? I think we are catching up to this technology on the regulatory side, and we have a lot more to do.