There's no question that with the growth in the number of projects, at least in the region I live in, which is Atlantic Canada, it certainly has taxed all of the agencies, not just the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency, but the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, other departments, and the provincial governments.
There is a tremendous amount of work that needs to be done, and at some level there may not be resourcing. Also, in consulting with both stakeholders and first nations, there's a potential for consultation fatigue. We have encountered significant challenge, and we are working with first nations in particular to see if we can't find ways to assist them to have that resource capability to participate in these very processes that occur under CEAA and provincially.
It is an ongoing challenge. Being more focused to get the right level of review for the right level of project is one way we can perhaps gain a little bit of efficiency and restore it.