Sure.
I can't speak that effectively to the production technologies. That's not part of my group at Alberta Innovates, but we do have major consortia that involve pretty well every major oil sands producer looking at new production technologies.
There's the AACI consortium, and I believe there are approximately 20 members from both Canadian companies and companies from around the world, so we're always investigating new technologies for SAGD, primarily, and how to unlock further resources. That consortium is a great way to do that preliminary investigation around technologies and get them to the point where some of the companies will decide to pursue those through their own further research and demonstration projects, either with our scientists or with other organizations in Canada or from around the world.
There is clearly lots of interest working with groups like COSIA and the former OSLI organization, which is focused on technology breakthroughs and provides new mechanisms to disseminate those technologies to either individual companies or groups of companies that would like to pursue them through joint projects. It continues to receive a lot of interest. Certainly there is a recognition that improvements in production can also result in significant improvements in environmental impacts, such as looking at solvent technologies for production, which recent reports have shown may be the place where the greatest improvements can actually occur from the CO2 perspective.