Sure. The Yukon Research Centre does have a booth down there. I spoke about the Northern Climate ExChange. Our team works down there because we have worked with the ArcticNet countries, and the ArcticNet is interesting. It is more a course in basic science, not the applied research. I have helped sponsor a dual-penetrating radar system that is used in glaciation exploration and research; it is down there and being shown off. The ArcticNet is interesting because it focuses on the sciences and it is global.
In Canada, I could say ArcticNet has mostly been in the eastern Arctic, and the Yukon Research Centre has been involved in some of that, especially through our ReSDA program. But I think that ties in with the Arctic Council, because it's where the researchers hang out. When those partnerships are formed in the ArcticNet, that information can be transposed and the Arctic Council can use that as potential policy-making. So it is vital. I don't play in that area as much, because I like building things and making things happen and helping industry, but I do see it as a vital research and communications tool. An exchange-of-information conference is going on right now.