That's a very pertinent question, and one of the founding principles that we embarked on was to ensure that man-made or natural events would have no impact on this particular storage facility.
There are a couple of things that I do want to clarify. When you use the term “intermediate”, there can be several different connotations of that. Intermediate in the nuclear world, in the waste world, means something a bit different. It's a bit higher classification of waste than what we are proposing to go into this near-surface disposal facility. Intermediate-level waste does not go into this facility. The near-surface disposal facility is a disposal facility for low-level waste.
We considered all possible climate change and major weather events. We looked at back-to-back, hundred-year floods. The facility itself is about 50 metres above the Ottawa River as it is today, and it's about 40 metres above the highest expected flood plain. We analyzed not only for climate change events but also dam failures. We are on a water system that is dammed, so we looked at potential dam failures upstream of the facility, and there was no impact. As a matter of fact, the base of the facility was significantly above the highest water level hypothesized.