I also have not had a chance to review the report, but I would like to comment on your perspective on the lack of data on aquifer reserves.
Again, in the Cold Lake-Beaver River water management plan, and in fact in Imperial's 30-year history of production in the basin, we've developed a tremendous groundwater monitoring network at our facility, which consists of over 600 groundwater wells. So we have considerable knowledge of the groundwater reserves in that area.
I think the step forward that needs to be taken is to take the silos of very good information collected by individual operators and to incorporate them into groundwater monitoring networks more regionally. We certainly understand very well the groundwater systems within our operations, but we'd like to link other operations so that there's a better regional picture of the understanding of groundwater.
Alberta Environment is currently pulling together three of these groundwater networks. One in the oil sands mining area. One is south of Fort McMurray in an area that's called a steam-assisted gravity drainage area, and another is the Cold Lake-Beaver River, which is somewhat separate from those other two.