Thank you for the question.
First of all, I'll mention what our project agreements are and then I'll indicate that depending upon the circumstance of a project, they can be completed very early in the stage of a project review, or depending upon the circumstances of the review, a little bit later than early in the project review.
The philosophy behind the project agreement is that at the earliest moment when there is enough useful information we work with our colleagues across the federal system to outline roles and responsibilities for the review of a particular project. Those include milestones for the environmental assessment, milestones for the regulatory permitting, and an overall examination of how the aboriginal consultation process will be conducted. We work with them to develop a document that will make it very clear who's doing what and what the project milestones are, including target timelines. Everyone who's involved in the review will get their deputy ministers to sign the project agreement, and then we'll post it publicly. Then we'll use the milestones and the target timelines in that project agreement to publicly track how that project is progressing through the review of—