Thank you for that.
With regard to the International Arctic Science Committee, Mr. Hik, one of the comments you made was that this should allow us to diversify and to actually work on projects that are beyond the scope of any single nation, so there should be cooperation among Arctic nations, and even non-Arctic nations. Any time you bring in change and set up a new agency, there's always some discussion around that.
For example, with the discovery of Franklin's vessel, for the first time in the High Arctic, we had that public-private partnership on an international scale. We have such a narrow window of time in which to work in the High Arctic. Certainly we work there 365 days of the year, but most people go to the Arctic for six weeks. Sometimes they go for eight weeks, but it's a very narrow window. The more cooperation and the more information we can get, whether from the Russians or from Siberia or from the Norwegians, is a positive step and it's a step in the right direction to have that one single agency at least as the umbrella.