As I said at the outset, there were a number of reports. The round table is an advisory committee, so the advice is offered up to the government to do with it what it chooses to do. There were a number of initiatives through the nineties focused on practical solutions to greenhouse gas emissions, on the transportation sector, on emissions trading, on the use of fiscal policy. There was also a national forum that was convened by the national round table to bring together members of the Order of Canada to look at what was known about climate change at that point, to try to arrive at some consensus statement over the issues that should be first and foremost in Canadians' minds. So there was that ongoing work in that period.
It's scaled up, obviously, because of references that have been made to the national round table by the previous government and by this government. So most of the more detailed analyses of the options that Canada is facing in the long term have really come over the last couple of years. It would be inaccurate to say that it was not a major preoccupation of the round table before that as well.