That's an interesting question. I want to answer it in two parts. First, I just want to touch on the collaboration with academia and universities for a second, because a significant part of that is the involvement of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. Basically, the chairs at the university that we participate in are also partially funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council. I guess it's an indirect answer to your question initially, but if you like, the public funds and moneys are actually also supporting those university chairs, so that's the tie-in.
With public consultation, there are different processes in which what is important to the public enters our specific research and development activities. An example I may have mentioned earlier was that public stakeholder desire for more rapid and effective reclamation is translating directly into our efforts. As I mentioned, we have a high degree of environmental research. Over the years, we have shifted from some of our fundamentals. For example, bitumen production research, while still a key component, is no longer nearly as large as our tailings and environmental research, which are both demanded of us as a company—it's something we want to do—from a regulatory perspective and also from a public stakeholder perspective. We do receive feedback and react to that.