Certainly.
There is an indigenous advisory and monitoring committee for the pipeline. Its inception was when the pipeline was first approved. That committee is composed of federal officials, indigenous communities throughout the pipeline route, and the CER. It focused its attention at first on reviewing the conditions that were set for the project to proceed. Then it focused on the monitoring of the operations of the existing pipeline because there was an existing pipeline; it was being twinned. Then it focused on the construction activities related to it.
Within the indigenous advisory and monitoring committee, there are subgroups related to, for example, marine shipping, emergency response, community engagement, and safety of the operations. There are different groupings of federal regulators and indigenous communities working together to kind of examine how the CER is looking at the pipeline, how the conditions are being met and when those are presented.
When the pipeline was approved, it had a set of conditions that had to be approved before it could actually proceed with construction and then, eventually, move forward with the opening.
That monitoring committee has now been in place, I believe, since 2017—so, for about six years. It was recently renewed in the budget so that it could continue its activities over the next number of years as the pipeline moves to operation.