That's a very broad question.
I also listened to Jay Famiglietti making a comment about the fact that there's perhaps an important role at the federal level to set a certain minimum standard. It can be very useful, because it's a shared resource and water doesn't know these provincial or territorial boundaries in the way the natural system works and so on. I think there's value in a nested approach in managing a public resource like fresh water.
There was the mention, though, of infrastructure for monitoring and being able to understand the quantity and quality of our freshwater resources more holistically. The relationship between our ground watersheds and our surface watersheds is a very important unknown. It's well within technology's ability to understand that more fully, and I suppose these abilities to monitor and track the dynamic nature of these systems so that we can react and adapt to the things that are being learned from monitoring those systems are key.