For the first answer, I go back to my opening comment. Who doesn't want to be part of the single biggest environmental policy that any jurisdiction could advance the world over? That's a new and refreshing way to think about this. There is no green economy without mining. That's very clear.
If you look at some of the more contentious matters that indigenous communities have raised, they are underpinned by concerns about the environment, obviously environmental concerns in the propinquity of any mining development that may occur to their reserve for the purposes of the Indian Act or their traditional lands and the collective interests of various treaties.
I can tell you from experience. I mentioned these major mining projects that we've advanced in the past couple of years. They are characterized by significant partnerships and roles by indigenous communities or their indigenous businesses in the business contours of a given project, in the environmental processes and contours ultimately of the project, and of course, importantly, labour. I speak more pointedly of human resources and building capacity in those important areas.
That's why we're able to cut the ribbon on the east-west tie here in a couple of weeks. It's an important piece of infrastructure across northern Ontario that will fortify electrification to municipalities and indigenous communities but also be an additional source of power for some mining operations across the greenstone belt.
I'm trying to keep my answers short. I forgot that you guys have only about six minutes.