In terms of needs assessments from a humanitarian perspective.... In order to develop the appeal that was referenced—the $816 million—humanitarian actors came together and completed the immediate response assessment, which is what allowed them to reach that figure to address those needs. That money goes until May 2023. It looks at the needs in the immediate, but also the relief needs that are going to be needed from January to May.
As part of that, Canada has supported a number of humanitarian partners with unearmarked funding that allows them to continue to use that money. As water recedes and areas become accessible, they will go in and help provide some of those populations with some of the services and relief items they haven't yet been able to access in their home locations.
Coupled with that is the ability to respond to winter, which has been factored in. As the needs assessments were done, the humanitarian community was not unaware that winter was approaching. Certainly, humanitarian needs shift as temperatures drop.