Actually, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada is the only department within the core public service that has a team of actuaries. Our chief actuary is a fellow of the Canadian Institute of Actuaries. They are doing some modelling in terms of the potential impacts of climate change. The sense is that the events will be more frequent and the variations will be more extreme.
We don't have any actual translation of how that would play out in terms of increasing the financial impacts at this point in time, but we are looking at, for example, modelling related to AgriInsurance. The federal government's role right now is to ensure that premiums are actuarially sound, so that the premiums we charge producers represent the indemnities paid. The provinces subsidize the premium rate. The premiums are actually based on historical performance, not on a forecast or the future. We're starting to look at whether there is a potentially better way to estimate what the premiums should be, based on climate scenarios versus historical performance.