I'll just do a quick run through the recommendations.
The first is to engage the full range of conservation NGOs and public stakeholders, which includes on-the-ground work, and policy and regulatory work.
The second is to commit to the biodiversity convention targets and develop strategies toward those based on the agreement reached at Nagoya, Japan.
The third is to enhance funding to accommodate habitat protection using the various acts we have.
The fourth is to engage first nations, municipal, and provincial governments in more strategic planning around habitat protection priorities.
The fifth is to provide incentives that are financial to landowners and to governments to put the effort on the priority habitat conservation areas.
The sixth is to provide economic incentives, particularly for species-at-risk recovery planning, and to provide funding to non-government organizations that will enable them to use their volunteer capacity to add to the effort toward habitat conservation.
Lastly is the need to acknowledge that protecting nature from harm isn't a matter, in the first place, of doing the conservation work in the wake of development but of pursuing habitat conservation that maintains the conservation and integrity of the environment at the front end.
Thank you very much for your time and I look forward to your questions.