Certainly, climate change is an ever-present consideration in the management of our natural and built assets, our cultural heritage assets and natural heritage. It's something we're facing and trying to manage every day. It's particularly notable in our northern sites, where we're dealing with melting permafrost. It's very much noteworthy in our coastal sites, where we're dealing with erosion and storm surge and increasingly intense storms. We saw this, for example, in hurricane Fiona, where a number of our sites across the Atlantic were affected. I think we're using a number of strategies in trying to deal with that in terms of adaptation.
In terms of our physical infrastructure, we're not just building back like for like. We're trying to look at ways to make our infrastructure more resilient to the impacts of climate change, whether that's setbacks from the coast or a variety of other techniques. We were fortunate in the case of hurricane Fiona to receive supplementary funding that has helped us to do that building back and with increasing resilience. It's a factor that we consider in all of our planning now, whether it's our management planning for our parks and sites, or investment planning, so that we're considering climate resiliency and also how we can reduce our contribution to climate change by making our operations more efficient in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.