Let me start and others can join in.
I'm glad you brought up the Ring of Fire. Basically, that's a major opportunity, but we've had an impasse. We need to move more quickly on these kinds of developments. If we can't unlock that logjam, and there's federal-provincial and inter-ministerial...it's a quagmire in terms of getting a permit to mine. It has to have the support of the first nations, who could benefit amazingly in what can happen up there, but we need to resolve the mistrust that I think has happened over the years. I think it's happening.
We did some work for the Assembly of First Nations on building a resource centre that would be trusted by the first nations. If you're negotiating these various deals, sometimes it depends on who's on either side to be able to make the deals. As I mentioned, both at the Mining Association of Canada and the Ontario Mining Association—I'm a member of both—there's a great realization that the relationship has changed. It's improved.
On my board of directors, I have Glenn Nolan from Noront, who's one of the greatest guys. He used to be the president of PDAC, the prospectors and developers, and he is first nations himself. He's a vice-president at Noront. They're starting the first operation. I think they're going to show the model of how to move forward.
The federal government has to come in with the partners there, the 13 first nation communities, to figure out the go-forward plan so that we don't miss the next boom cycle. If we miss that, basically, there are other areas in the world that are already working really hard. We're going to miss a major opportunity, and it won't come for another decade or two.