Just on the Dahla Dam, 80% of the people of Kandahar live along the Dahla Dam and the irrigation waterways the Dahla Dam feeds.
We are well on the way to meeting that target. We've de-silted canals. We've worked with local communities in establishing their ownership of the various gateways and waterways in the irrigation systems and in reclaiming that land.
We also have done a lot of training on new farming mechanisms and new crop development on Tarnak Farms, with the University of Guelph and other Canadian and Afghan partners, with a view to returning to pomegranate and other crops. So there is a net gain as to what we do with regard to soil reclamation and harvest reclamation.
I don't know what more to add. It's fairly significant. It is basically reclaiming what used to be, as Ms. Bossenmaier said, the breadbasket not only of Kandahar but of Afghanistan and the region. It could create livelihoods that theoretically would bring people back to traditional farming.