Thank you very much.
I would note that we've learned, in about the last 10 years since the National Energy Board started having oral traditional evidence sessions with elders and knowledge keepers, often early in our hearings, and accommodating a variety of cultural protocols and mechanisms, to be more respectful. Tracy mentioned some of those in her opening statement. A really key thing for us—and this is looking to the future—is that it's extremely important to develop those relationships in advance. With a federally regulated energy infrastructure thousands of kilometres across the country, and this infrastructure lasting for decades—50 to 60 years in some cases—this is the time frame in which relationships must be developed and maintained. We see that a lot of the early efforts have been focused on projects. That is how we have been doing things. We're learning quickly, but in fact I think the indigenous interest is more of a territorial interest, because many indigenous territories may have five or six lines, federally regulated pipelines, just as one example, so they're interested in those lines and in the safe operation and in a meaningful engagement with the Crown and the federal regulator on the same scale. It goes on for decades. We're at the front end of that and we're investing in it. Those two things together will get us in a better place.