If I may jump in here, for the scientific advisory group that Dr. Dodds mentioned, the last meeting came at the tail end of the Quadrennial Ozone Symposium, which is an international symposium held every four years that gathers all the ozone experts from around the world. The announcement was made of this change, that the data centre would still remain within Environment Canada but would be under the auspices of the meteorological service for the reasons that Dr. Dodds already explained. It was in front of an international audience and scientists that this announcement was made and received.
Now, the second point I want to make is that Environment Canada still has top scientists in ozone science. In Dr. Dodds' speech, she mentioned the 2011 Nature paper co-authored with others by, I believe, two Environment Canada scientists.
So we have the science capacity to oversee the data. We're not going to do it alone. We're going to rely on science experts from other countries. But that's fair enough. The ozone issue is a worldwide issue, and the distribution of ozone varies from one location to another, so it is truly an international effort under the auspices of the WMO.