Thanks very much for the question. It is very relevant.
One of the areas I have been involved with in the program for many years now, and where I have seen incredible improvement, is in the pace at which risk assessments are done. Previously we took many years to do one risk assessment; between 2006 and 2020 our plan is to do 4,300 risk assessments. We are now at about 3,500 risk assessments done.
Canada's plan to look at our legacy substances, go through our inventory of chemicals eligible for commerce in Canada, triage them, do risk assessments and then flag areas where we must take management action is honestly world-leading. Very few countries in the world have done that. That is one area where we have definitely sharpened our pencils and put a focused effort into the work that has to be done there.
Sorry for the extra time.
Thank you.