Thank you for that. I understand that it will be difficult to quantify. It is a major investment.
I appreciate that you mentioned the need for partnerships with the federal government, in this case for Saskatchewan. When you look at it collectively, because you also touched on the drought and flood control that can emerge from this, I think that investment towards adaptation and resiliency to climate change is one of the best things we could be doing, particularly in prairie Canada, on that privately owned farm landscape. Combine that with, of course, the yield gains, the speciality crops that can emerge and all the value-added opportunities for some of those smaller communities that are at times struggling, and the opportunity for them to thrive.
I know that there were some deliberations between the Province of Saskatchewan and the federal government in terms of possible investments and through which avenues. I'm wondering if you could explain where that process was, where it is, and where you think it's going, because it's my understanding that it would be a forced loan rather than any sort of actual investment from the federal government.