Yes, right now our audit is under way for 2007. We've approached 2007 differently from any other reports in the past. In a nutshell, we've taken a decision that we are going to treat 2007 as a decade in review. It's an idea that fell from something Mr. Tonks raised many years ago in one of the environment House committee meetings, which I think he was looking for at that time: What's the big picture? We get audit after audit after audit, but what's the big picture?
So this year we decided to take a large number of issues, a suite of issues, for 2007 and answer some very focused questions about those issues. So in effect, you can expect to see us speaking to a range of issues, everything from contaminated sites, water management, biodiversity, abandoned mines, etc., all kinds of work we've done in the past, to be summarized at a very high level. So we're going to go in and, for each of those topics, pick some very high-level past commitments and tell a story about progress over a decade.
That's our plan right through that report. In addition, for both the sustainable development strategies and for the petitions process, we'll be telling a story about how those two initiatives have evolved over the 10 years, what results have been achieved, and how the processes, we think, can be improved.