Excellent.
We have three transfers coming in. Two of those are from Environment Canada. We have one for the environmental restoration of the Great Lakes. We have a second one to support aboriginal involvement in activities related to programming for species at risk. We have a third one from DND for the efforts that we undertake on their behalf for search and rescue programming. We are transferring funding to support fisheries management in the Labrador Inuit settlement area out to the Department of Aboriginal and Northern Affairs. There is also another transfer to the same department for the co-management of the Tarium marine protected area.
Finally, as I mentioned, we have five internal transfers that allow us to get money out of our operating vote and into our grants and contributions vote, so that we can support the various programs that we undertake. Primarily that would be aboriginal supports programs. That's a good look at the 25 items at a really high level.
I will land on slide 6 to close. As the deputy said in his opening remarks, these supps would move us from $1.68 billion to $1.86 billion in terms of total authorities. Prior to these supps, we had very strategically managed $147 million in available authorities, through either reprofiles or the two carry-forwards that I mentioned on one of the slides earlier on, staying well within our limits in those instruments so as to align timing. As a great example, it's simply a matter of getting the capital funding aligned to the actual production schedules at Vancouver Shipyards. A lot of this is keeping that knitting tied together.
Altogether, as we move to the supplementary estimates that will come later in the year, we believe that DFO will have the authorities necessary to fulfill its mandate and expectations in 2014-15.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm happy to take any questions.