If I might add to that, as Lisa has pointed out, the intent is not only to map where the resources are, but also, and I think this is the critical point, to establish thresholds or limits that we can then monitor against performance, to ensure that the values we're trying to sustain—whether they be livelihoods for indigenous people, whether they be clean air and water for all of us—are actually maintained. Then we can challenge industry and governments to basically exercise stewardship within those thresholds and create the opportunities for innovation with new technologies, to create better and more effective regulatory mechanisms that are directed towards stewarding those thresholds as goals, and appropriately incentivize industry to perform against those measures.
We think that is the most effective way going forward, particularly in a region that is under tremendous pressure, such as the Athabasca Chipewyan territory.