Thank you.
I'm a projects lawyer, so I generally work on completing infrastructure projects from inception through to financing and construction. In terms of challenges in the water area, similar to many others—I do a lot of work in the renewable energy space as well—we regularly have clients or prospective clients or partners of our clients who decide not to move forward in investing in Canada, unfortunately, and participating in projects in Canada because of what they've heard about our inability to move forward on projects and to not get mired in approvals processes.
We've been successful in moving a variety of different projects forward, but I would say that the vast majority of my clients who have been successful are Canadian. I'm proud to work with a wide range of Canadian enterprises, including those owned and operated by first nations groups and others. But definitely projects are called off or slowed down or do not happen simply because of the spectre of the difficulty there is to get projects of various kinds done in our country.
That was one of the things I was thinking about when we penned our paper in this area, that the legal personhood point and not the—