Projections have been done for visible minorities. It is complicated to project in time—to 2031—what the francophone population in Canada will be relative to the anglophone population. A lot of assumptions have to be established because we have to try to take into account migration, language transmission, language transfers, and so on. It's quite a large-scale project. No one is currently doing that kind of study, or has already done it. More standard or more conventional projections have been made in the past, in Quebec, among others, by Marc Termote.
However, based on the model that has been developed and the information that has been distributed on visible minorities, this approach is relatively new and has not been used for other purposes. I know it is currently being done for aboriginal peoples. It's a project, a type of study, that could cost between $450,000 and $500,000 and could require about one year of work. In so doing, we would be able to establish these kinds of projections.