Certainly some of those needs are being met, and Dr. Papangelakis may have some comments as well, just because of the interactions with universities. In the conventional mining space, Canada is already very good at supporting the development of mining engineers and of metallurgical process engineers and scientists who are doing those things.
We have the technical skills and the capabilities to understand and to do the back-end piece. Part of what really is missing is the combination of industry project work, as Vlad talked about, because many of these companies are still potential producers, not actual producers. They're in an environment where they have capital constraints and fairly significant cashflow restrictions. So they're not in a place where they have an economic opportunity to fund upfront research or to get into the really long-term development opportunities. That's an area where we could as a government add some support and some access through organizations like NSERC or the CFI to continue to develop those areas of expertise.