No, that's not it at all.
First of all, if I could just remind you, Environment Canada is a very broad and complicated department. It includes the chemical management plan, Parks Canada, species at risk responsibilities, air and water diversity responsibilities, as well as biodiversity. We also have responsibility for the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act with regard to industrial projects. Environment Canada is very much a science-based department. We have responsibility for the Meteorological Service of Canada, the national weather service. We have responsibilities, as you know, for climate change, mitigation on one hand and reduction of greenhouse gases, but also adaptation to those changes, which are already taking place and will continue to take place, we expect.
There are a great many sublevels of scientific focus within Environment Canada with, I can tell you, wonderful people who are eager to fulfill their individual mandates and to ensure that Environment Canada maintains its international reputation as a world-class regulator. Much of what we do involves regulation. Much of the science done is to allow the establishment of standards and the maintenance and defence of those standards through regulation.