Sure, I appreciate that question. You've come here today with something that I've been extensively involved with for most of my private sector career and my political career.
With all due respect, I reject the premise—and I don't like to use that phrase—of where the provincial government, not you, has come on this particular development. The fact of the matter is that to understand the Ring of Fire, to appreciate the steps that have to be taken here, one would completely understand that FedNor—which I'm responsible for and doesn't fit here in Natural Resources, but I'm happy to talk about—has been actively engaged as full partners with a number of first nation communities that I've had the opportunity and privilege to work in, in other capacities, to be involved in the environmental assessment processes that are involved in the development of the Ring of Fire.
Furthermore, with certain precision, we have been engaged in energy corridors full consultation to understand and address what things like the Ring of Fire can do to help in having first nation communities get road access to any of the two extraction sites and to develop a better energy policy towards the first nation communities in those areas, and ultimately the Ring of Fire. To this point—