Insofar as the activity around climate change is concerned, I'd say there are two elements. First, the Government of Canada has moved in a particular direction that I think you're very familiar with. A large part of our work is trying to understand and tease out the impacts of climate change. The recommendation particularly focuses on warming waters. One of the things the commission was plagued by, I guess, was that it was a snapshot of time. I was on the stand with the commissioner for six days myself, and I can clearly remember how the questions were very much about the previous year or the given year as opposed to a trend over time. Warming waters is a perfect example of that. What we're trying to do is understand water temperature trends over a period of time. Our ability to sample and understand the ocean is improving, going out, as I was mentioning earlier, but an awful lot of that work is continuing the research, again not tied back to specific actions.
With respect to the commissioner for the environment and sustainable development, I know she has been engaged in a number of things around climate change, but again, from the point of view of managing her program, she's had to address certain elements of it as opposed to the whole thing, as talked about in the commission recommendation.