Thank you very much for a whole series of great questions.
We should be looking at our existing assets. We have facilities across the region. It's interesting that the Federation of Canadian Municipalities has taken a strong interest in exactly this issue. Their concern is that they have resources and needs, and if they can be combined with the current sovereignty issue we might get win-win situations all around. That would be excellent.
On implementing land claims, we have a long way to go. They are very complicated things to implement. We haven't done as much as we could to resolve them. There are a lot of big issues there. When they are implemented we're going to see a very different and much more positive world, because of the incorporation of indigenous understanding and engagement with Canada. The land claims process is a way in which a lot of indigenous people bought into this country in a very real and important sense. I think it helps.
We capitalize on indigenous knowledge in the north through the Canadian Rangers, as I'm sure you know. The remarkable ability of those people who provide us with eyes and ears and access to these regions is really quite profound.
There's a huge and very difficult debate between western science and indigenous knowledge. It is unseemly at times, but enormous learning in both directions has occurred, and where we've opened up our minds to working with indigenous people, we've learned a lot. Some great developments can take place there as well.
Thank you.