Through these legislative changes, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency has developed a much more enhanced role than it ever had before.
Prior to 2010 and the first set of legislative changes that consolidated responsibility for comprehensive studies, which are the bigger environmental assessments that we carry out, and now through Bill C-38 and the new Canadian Environmental Assessment Act that's in place, we have consolidated responsibility from as many as 40 different federal departments and agencies that could have had environmental assessment responsibilities to three departments and agencies that are now responsible for these projects going forward.
CEAA being one of those agencies, the National Energy Board and the Nuclear Safety Commission being the other two, now plays a much more enhanced role than it ever did before. Prior to these changes that we put in place in 2010 and now through 2012, the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency didn't have responsibility for carrying out any environmental assessments. Those responsibilities rested with different regulatory departments and agencies. Now we have an expert agency developing consolidated expertise to move forward on these reviews. Again, its role is limited to the environmental assessment process whereas the major projects management office is looking holistically at the system, whereby we have the environmental assessment process, the regulatory permitting processes at the back end of that process, such as the Fisheries Act and the Navigable Waters Protection Act, as well as all the related aboriginal consultation responsibilities. We pull that together to take a government-wide approach and perspective on these issues.