Certainly whenever a major project is proposed in traditional territories, the Government of Canada recognizes that it needs to engage with aboriginal people. There is not, at the moment, an official Government of Canada policy that covers all consultation with aboriginal peoples in all situations, but there's a commitment to respect the jurisprudence that you're talking about.
You're absolutely right. It has been coming up more and more since the Taku and Haida decisions, and we're still in a learning period. We're only two years after those decisions, and so federal departments, sometimes under the guidance of the agency, will get together when there's a major project and major impacts on aboriginal communities and we will look at mechanisms for engaging aboriginal communities and for allowing them to provide input into the environmental assessment process.
But I don't want to suggest that there's a cookie-cutter solution to this. As you know, across the country, the nature of aboriginal claims, whether or not they're settled, and the size of projects vary, So we try to adapt the approach in each region and each project. But we are heavily engaged in the issue.