Thank you. We do what we can.
In response to your question, primarily what they're involved in is not forecasting on global trends in terms of climate change and whatnot. They're providing day-to-day services for pilots, for ships, for artillery units, and whatnot, in terms of what the particular climatic conditions are that day that will affect the ability to operate. It tends to be very much what's happening in the next day to a couple of weeks that will affect military operations.
That said, we do pay some attention to climate change as a driver in a number of areas. With climate-change-enhanced storms, rising sea levels, coastal flooding, whatnot, there are effects in Canada, but what we see primarily are effects globally, where we then get involved because of a humanitarian need, for example. The military gets called out to deal with some of those things.
Climate change obviously is having an effect on our Arctic, but that effect is still relatively gradual. The Arctic still presents a very difficult operating environment, particularly for commercial purposes. That change, while it is real and while we are seeing even now a certain amount more of tourism traffic and research vessels, and whatnot, will continue to be gradual, probably throughout my lifetime.