Thanks for the question. You're right, they're in Bill C-69, where the impact assessment act is proposed. There is a new set of provisions, and they are certainly in line with, and in support of, the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The agency has been evolving over time in terms of moving away from just a de minimis standard of duty to consult, and looking at going above and beyond that in terms of engagement with indigenous peoples. The impact assessment act will institutionalize some of those practices. The early planning process that you mentioned is one of those places where there's an obligation on the agency to offer to co-operate with indigenous jurisdictions. There's also a mandated obligation for the agency to consult with indigenous groups, and to collaboratively develop what's called an indigenous engagement plan. That plan would be regulated and co-developed with those groups that are implicated in the process, and would drive the impact assessment process that would take place after that.