It's a huge constraint, simply because how can you have a target if you can't define it? You've confirmed for me yet again that these are very difficult to define. So by definition, the achieving of difficult to define targets is in and of itself extremely difficult.
What I saw in your report were a lot of comments about processes and plans and recovery strategies and so on, and very little about actual on-the-ground work. I happen to know a lot about the natural areas conservation program because I have a number of projects in my own constituency, and I even have part of my own land enrolled in the particular program. Also in the habitat stewardship program, I have a number of projects in my constituency. That's $18 million a year. Of course, we also have the famous North American waterfowl management plan, which started in 1987 and is probably the largest conservation program in world history. We can see that on the chart you put in your report about the response of migratory birds, waterfowl in particular, to that particular approach.
Don't you think that actual on-the-ground work, where we talk about hectares of land being conserved and managed in an ecological fashion, is what is really important, as opposed to strategies and plans?