Backing up to the other question, when you have those socio-economic surveys of the benefits of these natural resources to Canadians, such as the survey that Environment Canada used to do and the recreational fisheries survey that's done by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans every five years, those become important to decision-makers such as yourselves when you have policy decisions and development decisions.
They become important when you have to decide whether you're going to do some specific infrastructure development or human activity or allocate land in a certain way or for a certain use and you want to know what the trade-off is, because there are always trade-offs. When you don't have the information in front of you, then you don't know what the value of that trade-off is.