I'll assume that the question is directed at me. Perhaps after I start answering, Mr. Dermarkar might want to answer from AECL's perspective.
It's in the interest of everyone that we do something immediately, now, with the waste. The waste is here, as you heard from Mr. McBrearty's commentary. Some of the waste was placed in the forties and fifties. It's uncontained. It's exposed to the environment. We are being very proactive in identifying that we want to put it in a better condition in an engineered containment facility.
As far as the process goes, we are following CEAA 2012, and we are following the Canadian Nuclear Safety and Control Act. These are very good, well-defined legislative processes.
We started our draft EIS, or environmental impact statement, in 2016, with lots of engagement from the public and indigenous first nations. Only six years later, last summer, was the environmental impact statement accepted by CNSC staff. Now we're going through a very rigorous process at the commission hearing, which is another formal avenue for the public and indigenous first nations to be involved in.
There are a number of processes at play here that—