I agree that the targets and timetables are kind of the turning point in policy-making when it comes to sustainable development. We are coming from a world where politics was just programming and measures, means and measures, and now the targeted timetable approach allows us to go for verification, for public trust, and for a new kind of public-private partnership. That is why I think the targeted approach, as you call it, is a turning point.
From there on, you can develop institutional set-ups, but the first principle, as I've already told you, is targeted timetables. We're not yet in the position to enforce sustainable development policies by just rule-making, by just rules for behaviour. That is something that comes maybe in a couple of years, but as of now, we have the targeted approach as the best practice employed.