On the government lead, I've already described the government calling for a summit of five or six of the senior people in extractive industries, getting them in the room together with the government and saying let's see if we can work better on this. If the lead comes at the CEO level for the companies who say they're interested in corporate responsibility, the government says okay, let's do it.
The second aspect is what's holding companies back. Part of it is that the companies themselves want to promote their own initiative for some companies, rather than a collaboration. Companies would say that if they put money into a collective pot then they may not be able to get the concessions they want or the ability to go into foreign countries. So there's the rub. Yet many corporations are already working in health and safety, they're already working in policy in terms of representatives, as you said, of government. I don't see any reason why companies can't work together to spend their money wisely, along with the government's money. If there's a matching of NGO money by the government along with the corporations, that's working together. They're saying, "We’re going to go put our power system into Africa. We’ll build a network off the satellite. We'll take all the schools in the neighbourhood and give them all access to the Internet. There are computers there. We are already running power batteries. We'll go charge the batteries for the schools in the neighbourhoods." That's working together.
The pieces are all there, in my opinion. The networking isn't there. The Government of Canada can take the lead.