I'm happy to start on that.
Certainly, there are the environmental assessment, regulatory reviews and opportunities to provide input through that process. Maybe I can touch on areas that we are responsible for.
As an example, we're working together with the Northwest Territories and British Columbia right now. We have a bilateral management agreement on water. This is under the Mackenzie River Basin Board umbrella. We're developing a learning plan on the Liard River.
In doing so, we're working together with elders who have knowledge of water. We have contracted an elder who has expertise in this area. He has developed a land and peoples relationship model. His name is Joe Copper Jack. He has done this process in the Liard basin, where he has done an elders' circle collecting knowledge about water from the basin.
Bringing that into our processes, like land use planning and water planning, we're doing a learning plan on the Liard River. Before we do the western knowledge side of it, we're also finding out what knowledge is out there on water from an indigenous perspective and we're bringing that into the process.