I have one comment on your question, Mr. McLeod.
I can say right from the outset that you get on the land at the planning and permitting stage, when you're literally having no impact but walking the land, and already consultation and discussion with the communities start. With any of the early exploration permits—the air, water, noise, industrial sewage, and anything that's going on with water, streams and rivers—all the way along there's a tremendous amount of consultation. It's not really consultation as much as it is inclusion...where those things don't advance. There's a tremendous amount of discussion there.
At Éléonore in Quebec with the Cree, the environmental impact statement was basically co-written, so we worked with our Cree partners at that time. We already had the relationship fully in place, and the agreement was far enough down the road that there wasn't something we were trying to get somebody to agree to. We were working together, collaborating, and moving that forward.
I think the level of integration, just from what I've witnessed, is very high.