It would be helpful to have those conversations with the U.S. federal departments because they have influence on the commissioners. Ultimately, we're dealing with commissioners from Alaska, Washington and Oregon all together, not just Alaska itself. The treaty has to be renegotiated by 2028. Our Canadian commissioners are dealing with all of the U.S. commissioners in that renegotiation, and Alaska is part of the U.S. commission.
Diplomatic work in the short term to get U.S. folks on side and, at the same time, discussions initiated with U.S. commissioners at the treaty table both need to happen to create the political will to actually do a thorough review of the treaty and to make the necessary revisions in a timely manner.
Like I said, it has to be laser focused on whether we're meeting the principles set out in the treaty, because they're pretty straightforward, and the current review is not asking those hard questions.