Sorry for the interruption, but it's a fabulous question and I could actually answer both from a personal experience and otherwise.
I do sit at mining investment conferences where there are quite literally dozens and sometimes hundreds of companies presenting, and we also do go through the websites of our members and just general industry, and I can tell you that you'd be very hard pressed to find one company that is not doing something. Everybody recognizes that they have to do something.
These things are often very scale-specific. One would have to appreciate that a small company of a market capitalization of, say, $10 million or $20 million, is going to have a very different program, for example, from that of a multinational like Goldcorp or Barrick. Let me just talk about what a small company can do. I would also point you to the UNDP atlas that maps mining to the SDGs. In there, actually the company that I was CEO of is recorded and recognized. We can do simple things. I'll give you a couple of examples.
We were working in an area and it became apparent to us that one of the rural schools in the community didn't have running water from the central well into the school. It actually happened that one of our geologists had those skills. On a Sunday afternoon, she simply came and asked if she could have 500 feet of plastic tubing because this is what she used to do during her youth. Alternatively, we had been importing plastic core trays to store the core that we drilled during the exploration. We were importing the trays from Canada, through Miami, and all through the port systems. Yet in the area there were forestry plantations, wood mills, and we were able to transfer that set of skills and requirements to the local forestry people and carpenters to make core trays for us—