I'll defer to Ms. Leach on that, but first, just very briefly, what we've said in chapter 1 is that with the changes to CEAA, the previous obligations that had been there in CEAA to evaluate every phase of offshore oil and gas exploration changed quite considerably.
One of those changes was no obligation anymore in CEAA to evaluate the impacts of offshore exploratory. The boards told us that, one, they were caught by surprise. Two, they then had to try to figure out what they had to do under CEAA and what they were obliged to do, under more broad terms, on the Atlantic Accord.
Right now this is a period of uncertainty, but they have said—it's in their response—that they are going to stick with the old CEAA and do all the environmental evaluations required under the old act. They're reviewing that up to March 2013. They would then decide what they're going to look at and not look at in the future.