Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Let me thank both of our witnesses here this evening for taking the time to contribute to our study.
Dr. Waite, it's lovely to see you again. In September 2016, as I remember, I was thrilled to be at the original funding announcement for the Ocean Frontier Institute at Dalhousie University. My recollection is that at the time, Scott Brison was the minister for the Treasury Board and was there representing the Government of Canada. I was there as a representative of the provincial government.
I believe that $94 million is what Canada contributed at the time, and there was great support from Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, P.E.I. and a number of other partners, with another $125 million. That showed us a wonderful example of how governments at different levels, but also universities and national and international research partners, can collaborate and work together.
We're talking about moon shots and the extraordinary efforts that it took years ago to get mankind to the moon and the immense scientific spinoff that came from those voyages. I'm curious: What you would say to the claim that we know more about space than we know about the deep sea?
I'm going to take you to deep blue carbon—I wrote that down. It's about taking carbon from the atmosphere and storing it in the deep sea. It sounds to me like we have a long way to go. Can you speak to us about that and the value of researching the ocean floor with the same ambition that people researched space with years ago and probably still do?