If I may, I will speak very plainly on the issue of water. The NACC did not consider water as an issue at all; it was not a subject of discussion and not a subject of any of the recommendations made.
The area on which the NACC chose to focus was energy, specifically. Frankly, the vast majority of the discussion about energy dealt with issues within Mexico. Members of the NACC were very cognizant of the fact that those were decisions the Mexicans had to make for themselves and that it was in their sovereign jurisdiction.
The main impact for Canada, for instance, was in regard to very practical things, such as our current very vibrant energy sector that is short of skilled people. Mexico, because of its restrictions on the development of its own resources, has a surplus of skilled people. Can we enhance or facilitate the temporary movement of those people, so that we can work on our labour shortage for now while helping the Mexicans develop and bring their skills up to the highest possible level, so that they're ready to work more effectively in Mexico when the time comes?
If I could speak more generally, not to the water issue so much, but to your second point, which was...?