There are two dimensions to this, Mr. Chairman.
The first dimension was an investment, which is still rolling out and being implemented in Budget 2007, to increase the capacity by about 50%, if my memory serves, through environmental enforcement officers on both the environment protection side and on the wildlife side. It was intended to hire and pay for and equip new environmental enforcement officers. They were to be deployed right across the country, basically expanding the geographic reach and in some cases the depth of our capacity to investigate and enforce.
In Budget 2008 there was a second round of investment in this area, which was to provide greater capacity in the environmental enforcement branch in areas such as forensic capability, data development, and tracking so that our enforcement program would know where the greatest risks are, to develop the evidence base, to be able to bring the detailed forensic analysis to court to achieve a successful prosecution—for example, in the illegal trafficking of endangered species across borders—or to be able to attribute a particular oil spill in a marine environment to the particular oil on a particular vessel, for example.
So in terms of both the human resource capacity and the science and technical capacity to back up their work, we are rolling out those investments and will be over the next couple of years.