There are two levels. With respect to environmental assessment, there are a couple different venues through which we will engage the public and stakeholders and indigenous groups. As I mentioned, we do strategic environmental assessments—broad based, large geographic areas—every five to seven years, looking at the biological and geophysical sensitivities of an area. Layered on that is project-specific environmental assessments, of course, with which the committee would be well familiar.
The third primary venue through which we invite public feedback and input is through something like a development plan approval process for something like a Hebron project or Hibernia—the big household name projects. There is a third process there wherein you can look at the socio-economic and other considerations in a megaproject, and they often include public hearings.