I'll jump in with one quick one, and I'm proud to bring this example back from Alberta.
If you go to the Alberta Energy Regulator website right now, it is a very high-tech website where you can access information on applications, you can access information decisions from the Alberta Energy Regulator, and all those kinds of things. At the very least, there is this idea of a public registry, where authorization requests, decisions, and the authorizations themselves are posted, and the monitoring data is available, so that individuals can assess that data and make the decisions. I don't mean to be pugnacious about this, but I'll make the point. Unless my more scientific colleagues can correct me, it would be impossible to show a cause and effect in less than three years from when the regulatory change occurred and anything that's happening in the environment. We would need at least 10 to 15 years.
I apologize, I haven't done that work. I will try to do that work maybe in the future, but it would be impossible right now to suggest that a cause and effect could be identified in that context.