You can't say that. These changes can be seen every day. I can't say exactly what will happen in 10 years or what parameters will be more difficult to understand 10 years from now.
What we can do is show you the data today and show you what you need to work at. The caribou paths are changing, the permafrost is changing, and the ice is melting longer in, say, Larsen Sound. The polar ice comes from the north into the Northwest Passage and makes it much more difficult than it was a few years ago, and it will be that way for a while. So it's a matter of understanding exactly where we are with climate change and then taking action that in some cases mitigates it, in some cases takes advantage of it, and in some cases recognizes that we have to do something to prevent the next tipping point from happening.
I'm outside my area of expertise, but take what's happened with cod. I'm not talking the cod off Newfoundland; I'm talking about the four-inch cod that sit under the ice in the northwest. Twenty years ago, the captain of a ship would tell you that when the ice flips over you'd see 500, and now you see four. And that's because he's a tipping point for the food chain, ecologically, up in the north.
Does that mean things are going to be serious in 10 years? I don't know. It means it's serious now and we need to mitigate the effects of this trend. You do that across each example you have that provides a tipping point in the north, and there are several.
The flow of water from Alaska, the Pacific water and the Atlantic water...by measuring salinity and by the tide, you can tell which water is getting there first, and that's changing. And those current flows tell you what's going to happen with the atmospheric flows.
All of this is information that we need to collect so that you can provide it to the people who know, so that they're working with accurate data and not with data that has large error bands and doesn't mean anything.