One of the most important things is that if you have sufficient social policy and a sufficient social safety net on the one hand, and on the other hand a green industrial policy to build out an alternative, you don't need a just transition. That takes care of itself. That was Denmark's experience. They didn't need to talk about a just transition, but just scaled up the wind industry and protected everyone who was displaced.
More recently, countries like New Zealand and Scotland have led, first of all, as we just discussed, with dedicated advisory and coordinating bodies, commissions or agencies to oversee just transition, because it's an extremely complicated topic and involves every kind of government, as we've heard, so you need some sort of coordinating body.
Then the last piece is having clear environmental regulations that are consistent with net zero and with our climate goals. New Zealand and Denmark, for example, have both committed to winding down or phasing out oil production entirely, and that gives them a framework within which to design social and industrial policies.