There's virtually no involvement in the north. The reason is that in the north, north of 60, the environmental assessment regimes are dependent on the particular arrangements through comprehensive claims. In those land claims, a board will be established. For example, in the Yukon there was an agreement between the federal government and 14 Yukon first nations. Based on the land claims there, they set up what they called the Yukon Environmental Socio-Economic Assessment Act, and there is a board associated with that that carries out all those environmental assessments.
In the Northwest Territories, the Yukon, and Nunavut, any of those arrangements in the north do have the option of referring a project to the Minister of the Environment, and they would be asking the minister whether he'd set up a review panel. When they would typically do that would be if there were transboundary effects. If the effects of a project in the Yukon, Nunavut, or Northwest Territories are limited to that region, those individual boards would look after things.