I'll start and then I'll pass it over to Stephen.
First of all, to highlight that, the investments we're looking at now are the biggest investments in more than a generation. That's an extremely positive thing to see. What we need to do is recognize what infrastructures gaps we currently have.
Power, as you just mentioned, is a big one for the Northwest Territories. As you may or may not know in the committee, we're disconnected from the rest of the North American grid, as are Nunavut and the Yukon. That creates real challenges from a community perspective and also from an industrial perspective.
When we talk regularly with our colleagues in the Canadian Armed Forces and the JTFN, it's...as investments come, make sure they're tying into the community needs and having those dual and multi-use needs met. Yellowknifers and northerners are going to want to see the benefits to themselves alongside the military aspect in terms of ensuring that the security and sovereignty is real for all of us.
Power is definitely a big one. In terms of actually moving equipment, that gets down to roads, and roads to smaller communities. Yellowknife has a road. It's a single road in and out. It creates logistics.
For telecoms, we have one fibre line to the city, so it creates concerns around losing that again, as we had threats of in 2023. Other communities lost it in 2023 during the wildfires.
Those are the immediate needs. We're doing well day to day, but any time there's a threat to those key pieces of infrastructure, we don't have the redundancies.
Stephen, I'll pass it over to you for anything you'd like to add.