Let me give you an example based on our work with researchers in Germany with the Humboldt institute. That's a partnership between the University of Alberta and the Helmholtz Association, which is the German equivalent of the National Research Council. We have teams of researchers from Canada and from Germany who are working on applying new technologies, particularly for land reclamation. In dealing with some of the sites—for example, at Suncor—they've been advising on how to bring in new technologies that have been tested in Germany for reclamation of mine sites and that can be applied in Canada to speed up reclamation and to enhance the development and restoration of active ecosystems.
This is an example of where another country has had significant experience, and we're working with them to try to bring that activity to Canada and establish whether some of those ideas from Germany work in the boreal forest of Canada or whether they don't work. That's part of the screening that's essential before it can be applied on a large scale. I'd like to think that in terms of examples we are interested in collaborative research and in getting our students working with German researchers to learn about the best they have to offer. That's an example.