It's variable, and the Treasury Board has criteria to evaluate, first of all, if a program that was submitted was truly a climate change program or something else, because often departments mix the two. It wasn't a program that was providing benefits from a standpoint of climate change but the program was more an environmental program dealing with some other issue.
In terms of the results, again we cannot speak of those, because they were submitted to cabinet for approval and we do not have access to the information, but we know that they followed a very rigorous process. Departments were involved, information was provided, was returned in some cases to the department when it was not complete or was not following the proper framework, and then they were moving like that to get something they could make decisions on.