Thank you. That's an excellent question, and I'm going to break it in two.
We have a hat to wear as an owner, and then, quite separate from that, there were access and benefit agreements negotiated with each aboriginal group along the route. So with respect to our owner's hat, we have a one-third share in the pipeline, and the condition on which we have that share is that we have to pay for it. We have to finance that share on our own. There was no gift from our partners whatsoever.
We're paying our way, and in return for that we actually have two seats at the board table of the Mackenzie gas project and we participate in all of the committees—the environmental committee, regulatory committee, technical committee, commercial committee, and so on. In that way, we're able to actually influence how this project develops and moves forward. We have had a direct impact on a number of processes, where the desires at the community level have been brought to the board table and resolved successfully.
In terms of access, Imperial Oil is the project manager, and they negotiated access and benefit agreements with each aboriginal group down along the pipeline route. We, as an owner, were conflicted in those discussions, and did not take part in those discussions. They were successfully concluded with three out of the four groups, and the fourth group is very close.