There are a couple of things that are approaching that. One is, as you suggested, working with those smaller countries themselves, and I'll come back to that.
There's also the fact that all of this is tied to one single global environment. How we can help them best is by helping the entire world achieve the goals that it needs to achieve, the plans that it needs to achieve, to keep the world within the 1.5°C warming. Part of what we do is work to make sure that we are doing what we need to do in Canada and that we are pushing our partners internationally. Again, as I mentioned, that's going to be a big part of what we talk about at COP28, starting in just a few days.
With these countries, some of our funding goes through multilateral organizations—that could be the United Nations Environment Programme, for example—to work with countries to develop plans to help them prepare for and respond to disasters. Some of that is on capacity building, and it can be things like working with them on how they treat the methane that comes from their solid waste. There are a lot of levels that we're working at.
I'll be honest. I think the Secretary-General of the UN said it really well in September, when he said what we need to do is “everything, everywhere, all at once”. That's certainly an approach that we believe is appropriate.