I would like to add to that. I think we could ask questions and then have you pass those questions on to Imperial.
Something tells me that the lack of communication around this incident was a bit more orchestrated. It won't be until the public interest investigation is conducted that the truth will come out, because to go on for this long.... A lot of data has been collected, and to say they were going to tell the communities at one point and it was going to be soon means there was a miss within those CBAs. There was a misplaced trust with the industry's ability to self-regulate and be forthcoming with information in a timely manner. “Timely manner” is a very loose term and very subjective, and I think that's where the system has failed.
The AER is proposing solutions to hide this water, because there's so much of it. They want to put it into these large pits, put water on it and wait for a thousand years for these lakes to be real lakes. This is all public knowledge and public information out there based on public reporting, and the ask from all the communities has been to treat this water effectively so it does not continue to contaminate the environment. This is continuous environmental discrimination in that area. To say that we could release it into the Athabaska River and dilution is your solution, or that we could put it in these pits and eventually they treat themselves.... They're not effective treatment options. To leave it, walk away and have it treat itself is not treatment.