Regional assessment offers the potential to be highly beneficial for governments, proponents, indigenous groups, stakeholders, and us as the regulator. I'm excited about the potential for a regional assessment to be evergreen, as opposed to our strategic environmental assessment, which has to be updated periodically. We're talking to the agency about some sort of digital format, but we haven't moved past paper in our strategic environmental assessments. That offers great potential in terms of everybody involved in this space.
A regional assessment also offers the opportunity to streamline and reduce the burden on everybody I just mentioned. There is a real risk and a danger of fatigue, not only on the part of those on the regulatory and government side but also for proponents and those we consult. We want to minimize consultation fatigue, and the chance to do things more collectively and robustly at the same time has great potential. The caveat or the condition is the governance. We've have to get the governance right. We want to be inclusive but not overly cumbersome.