Even here, because we're so interconnected these days. It's not only an interconnection in the environmental field, where what you do with water in one jurisdiction affects another downstream or upstream. What you do with respect to air, obviously, affects other jurisdictions, so there's that environmental relationship.
But it also relates to trading regimes and economic regimes. We now have international regimes, a significant body of law, certainly on the environmental front, that is built on the premise that we're all in this together. We are all interconnected, and we need to be able to rely on people, so when they negotiate agreements that are in the best interests of the international community, including Canada, they want to see us at the table. They want to see us meeting our commitments that we've made, and I think now more than ever, that is the climate in which we are actually operating. So we are so interdependent and interconnected that people have expectations of us, rightly or wrongly. I think that drives them—as well as, of course, the self-interests of countries. So it's a whole range of reasons, I suspect.