I'm not sure I can answer that. There are some countries—New Zealand, for instance—that have a distinct commissioner of the environment. Most countries, though, do not have that kind of position, and most countries, quite honestly--well, some of the European countries do a fair bit of environmental auditing work. I would look at countries like the Netherlands, Norway, and probably Great Britain, to a certain extent; they in fact do environmental auditing, and it is done by the auditor general or the auditor general's equivalent, so it is part of their work.
I was trying to make the point in my opening statement that our environmental audit practice is not limited simply to reports issued by the commissioner. It is integrated into all the audit work we do, even financial audits or audits of crown corporations; the environmental aspect is integrated throughout the practice.