Sure.
For obvious reasons, Canada wants to work with our international partners on a lot of the initiatives they're working on. We had meetings with the EU, the U.K., China, India, Korea, the U.S., and New Zealand, and more than anything explained where Canada is at and how we're moving forward, because there was a lot of concern when countries heard that we were 35% above our target. They were concerned about how we were going to move forward.
They were very assured and happy to see that Canada was putting targets in place. When they found out that we had already put a long-term target in place, Sir Nicholas Stern, in particular, with whom I met about his report, was pleased, because his recommendation was that all countries at the conference take on a mid-century target immediately, so that industry and governments can start thinking very long term about where they're going—that the 2012 targets are not sufficient and we have to move way beyond that.
Canada has obviously set a target that was recommended by the national round table. It was very widely researched, which was obviously important to our government, because it had the science to back it up. Over the coming months, we're setting the short- and medium-term targets, and a framework to be able to help industry comply with those targets.