Thank you very much for your question.
Let me start at the beginning of the negotiation of the CBFA. Fundamentally, the agreement, which was publicly announced in 2010, was a truce between two warring factions at the time: the Canadian forest industry and the environmental community in Canada. That was a memorandum of understanding, if you will, between those two sectors, and it was intended to be a foundation upon which the two sectors would then speak to others.
The Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement has a vast scope stretching from British Columbia across the boreal forests of this country to the island of Newfoundland. There are almost 600 first nations communities in that scope. It was certainly not our intention to exclude communities in signing this peace between our two parties, and we did have conversations with first nations communities at the time. But it was fundamentally to bridge the gap between those two warring parties and strike a new relationship between those communities that we entered into the CBFA.