I would say it's the unknown. Our experience has been that resource development has come to our doorstep sort of at the last minute, so we're unprepared. At the end of the day, we don't necessarily pick up all the benefits that we could. That's why we want to change the approach.
We want to work together with the government to develop a 30-year infrastructure plan so that our people will know exactly what's likely to happen. We see the maps. We see the geology. We see all these explorations. We have over 300 explorations [Technical difficulty—Editor] territory, but we don't know when a project is going to happen.
Even these lithium mines.... There are five of them, and if you ask all of them how they're going to transport the material out, they have five different answers. There's no coordination, as we say, in transportation. That creates concerns and confusion. If we can plan better, have a better plan together that includes first nations people, then we'll see more projects and partner projects where benefits will be shared.