That is really remarkable. One of the questions I got was, what accounts for this? We hope that it's because of our audit. I don't actually care what created the change; the fact is that cabinet now, in 93% of the cases for which it should have information about the environmental effects, both positive and negative, has that information in front of them, as well as the social and the economic effects.
That is really what we're trying to achieve when we talk about sustainable development. We want the decision-maker to know what the environmental, social and economic implications are. In the past, all they really had was economic, sometimes social, but usually socio-economic, and they never really had the third piece of the stool. Now they do. That is a positive thing.