Thank you.
I'm going to spend my few short minutes to Mr. Fox. I did appreciate your comment in terms of the New Afton mine because, of course, we know there has been a good agreement put in place in terms of royalty sharing, benefit agreements, and employment opportunities. Actually, the most fascinating is some of the work they're doing around bat habitat protection and the partnership that they have there.
Clearly, from the mining perspective and the projects like Prosperity and Ajax, they did not have community indigenous support and those projects were turned down. The jurisprudence, I think, is getting pretty clear. I keep going back to the same thing because I'm not yet satisfied with the answers I'm getting.
If we go from the current jurisprudence that we have to the new free, prior, and informed consent, and I'm going to use Kinder Morgan again because it's very close to mind right now, some of the NDP representatives have said that every single community impacted must give consent or it is a veto and cannot go ahead.
From your understanding of this legislation, if they move forward to a new framework that does not consult and accommodate, which for mining essentially means consent, but perhaps for a cross-boundary project means there are times where someone ultimately has to make a decision, are we potentially heading into more litigation and more confusion? Do you have any comments on that?