Thank you for the question.
There absolutely has been a plan, and we have talked to stakeholders about it. It's a five-point plan for meeting our 5% and 10% targets. Many stakeholders are getting tired of hearing it, but they have heard it often.
One is to finish what we started. We had a number of MPAs that we had been working on, so let's get those over the finish line.
Two is to use large, pristine areas—some people don't like the term “pristine”, but large areas—as MPAs.
Three is to form MPA networks. Develop MPA networks in five priority areas, and now we're looking at increasing that number.
Four is to take other effective area-based measures. Those are fisheries closures and other measures, and we've developed guidance to see what can count toward that 5% and 10%.
Five is to amend the Oceans Act to give us the time to provide the interim protection. We've talked about that to many people.
The second thing I'd say is that it is all science-based. We have made a big point, as we've gone through this, of saying that we will not simply draw lines in the water and say, “There's our 5%.” It's about protecting corals and sponges, seamounts, sea pens, and species that we've identified as important species that need protection, and applying the measures that are appropriate for conservation.
The third thing is we have made sure that we've had full engagement.
We're hearing some concerns here. We need to reflect on them. That's really important, because at the end of the day, we will do it. It is, though, science-based. There is a plan, and we need the partnership of communities and fisher groups for this to be effective.