Mr. Chair, in short, just about everything. To be specific, we're looking at how we, first of all, employ people who have our safety culture. That's the most important thing to us, to make sure we don't have a number of safety issues. We're training people on that. That goes all the way from engineers to the people who actually do the grubbing and construction work out on the field.
The second thing is we're looking at how we make these contracts small enough so that aboriginal people and people in the local communities can actually participate. Those would be things like clearing the ground, reclaiming the ground, ditching, pipeline work.
Then we go to the next level of work. We need everything from pipefitters to welders, to construction people, to mechanics. We need operators. We need skilled people all the way up to the engineers and geologists, so that we know how to best reclaim, how to best produce this product, and how to do it to get the most recovery, get the best technologies out there. It goes all the way up to scientists looking at how we take that new technology and make a step change in how we're producing this. It goes all the way from unskilled to very, very skilled people. We need more of everything.