Absolutely. The first part, of course, gets back to a point that was made. You need resiliency in the communications. This means that having simply one cable and one means of Internet connection is not good enough. When Yellowknife goes down, you can well appreciate the problems that you're talking about in the outlying communities. The government has to ensure—it has to be funds from the federal government, because the territories will not have the necessary resources—that you have multiple means of information access and availability.
The next part is transportation. This goes to the infrastructure capability. You need to have the ability to move. That means, of course, ensuring that you have not only the runways beyond the forward operating bases, but also the communities' means of being able to get to each other in the event of an emergency. This is something the Russians did prior to the resumption of the war in 2022. They made sure that each and every one of their northern airfields was brought up to full standards. Go beyond the four forward operating bases and think in that context.
Another part is, of course, the marine communications and navigation that are going to be coming as climate change becomes more of an issue, opening up the waterways. Think in terms of multiple communications, navigation and connections. That ultimately means infrastructure for the northern communities.