I'm not going to put a number on it because, again, I'm not confident enough in my analysis to be able to put a number on it.
Obviously, habitat protection is critical. We know that for over 80% of species at risk, their key risk is habitat, so protecting habitat is going to be the solution to that, and restoring habitat.
There are examples where it is working. The act is a decade old, but it takes a long time to recover a species, so we're not going to see instant results. In some cases, some species recover faster than others, and there have been some success stories, but it's a long haul. We're only just getting to the point where recovery strategies are identifying critical habitat, and we need to move on to action planning so that that translates the critical habitat measures to the ground.
We are getting there. We are making progress, important progress, and we're accelerating the rate at which recovery strategies are being developed, but we need to get them done and we need to get to action planning, and that requires concerted effort. That's where we're really going to see the habitat protection measures for many species playing out and the species recovering.