With respect to the critical infrastructure strategy and action plan, the strategy itself and action plan are the product of a federal-provincial-territorial consensus, if I can put it that way. The Auditor General mentioned that it hasn't been through the final approval yet. That is, we think, very close at hand.
There was a meeting of deputy ministers in September where this was discussed and there was consensus there. So it's just actually going through a federal-provincial-territorial ministerial approval process at the moment. It was very much generated from there.
Among all governments it recognizes ten critical infrastructure sectors, such as energy and utilities, finance, food, and so on. These are all set out. It sets a way forward in terms of information sharing and information protection. This is quite important, because in the critical infrastructure area, when you're dealing with, let's say, utilities or certain other manufacturing sectors and so on, there's information that they also want to make sure is part of this enterprise. This is so they can protect some information that is inherent to the protection of their own business interests.
There's also an action plan. So there's a strategy together with the action plan going through an approval process now, and the strategy actually sets out the steps: what you're going to do in year one and what you will do in year two when you get to assessing the risks and running the exercises and making sure that it's working and functioning well.