Thanks for the question.
On that last point, we went from nine Coast Guard Auxiliary units up north five or six years ago to 33 as of last year. This is key for us in being able to rely on a community to quickly respond to a local call, as opposed to our having to deploy ships that will have to go hundreds of miles to get to that point, taking them away from the business of supporting the resupply. Those are the kinds of investments we're looking at.
From a marine awareness perspective, the Arctic is not well served by technology right now. The Internet is extremely slow and so on. We're really looking forward to the low-earth orbit satellite constellation being deployed a few years from now, at which point we're going to be able to use more technology. We're not going to be able to recreate in the Arctic the navigation system we have down south. It would take decades to do that. Technology and things like virtual aids to navigation and so on will be much more accessible. That's what the team is focusing on right now.