Okay.
As I noted earlier, the threshold is $100,000, and that's broken down by categories of payment. The payment categories are taxes, royalties, fees, production entitlements, bonuses, dividends, and payments for infrastructure improvements. Those are the broad categories.
The way it's going to work is that if $100,000 is paid in one of these categories, or more, either in one payment or a series of payments over the course of the year, then the entity is required to report on those payments. As I said earlier, this is aligned with what is happening in the European Union and the U.S.
With this alignment, we're hoping to have quite the global reach, not only within Canada, because it will apply to publicly listed companies as well as medium and large private companies, but globally, in an aligned way.
In terms of deterring corruption, by making that information available it allows citizens around the world to be informed of those payments and to hold their governments to account on what has happened to the money.