Okay. Because of the time, I'll use examples rather than going through all eight.
It should be relatively easy to increase collaboration, especially within the federal government, and not to have, for example, Environment and Climate Change Canada pushing on one side of the rock and Natural Resources Canada pushing on the other side of the rock, which has happened in the past, as they are trying to push the rock up the hill, to use an analogy. So that's low hanging fruit, in one sense, for the government to get its act in order and to look at that in a horizontal or centralized manner.
Lesson number 8 is difficult. We have a lot of structures in society—governmental and non-governmental—that discount the future, as I mentioned, and it will be hard to have people think about long-term implications and not just think about them but act on them. So that's a challenge but I don't see a way out of this without really addressing that challenge.
You mentioned that this is a long two hours. I'm very pleased to have a non-partisan committee engaging on these issues. I'm happy to stay here the rest of the day if you want me to. It's good to see.