I mentioned a few things in my presentation. We are seeing it every day, more and more, with increasing storms. As I said, there are species that are moving. That means different impacts for fisheries—who can access those, who gets to fish and where they get to fish.
I think we ourselves are struggling with the balance and complexities. It's calling on us to act with urgency, but we're not ignoring it or pretending that this shift won't be difficult. We all need to sit down and figure that out. We do think that strong planning processes should be required to be able to do that and find that way forward. As you know, climate change is already impacting fisheries, aquaculture and other ways of life. We have to reduce emissions, get off fossil fuels as fast as we can, and not ignore, but take seriously, those concerns.
Things will shift, but we can find ways to codesign research and codesign planning and figure out what our priorities are moving forward to get to clean energy and mitigate some of those impacts as quickly as we can.