First of all, you need good data.
I think you had something exceptional here last week. It was at the Canadian Space Agency, in order to develop a protocol with the geomaticians at the Université de Montréal,
the Université du Québec à Montréal
and McGill University and the engineers at the Space Agency to use their satellites, especially Landsat 5 and RADARSAT, to constantly monitor the rate of pollution on the ground and correlate it with what's going on with the ground sensors and finally with our database in cardiology, because I'm a cardiologist. I know people in oncology and cancer are doing the same.
Having funding to achieve good measurements, good data, is definitely a plus, and this is a federal issue since we're working with the Canadian Space Agency.
That's the first thing—