Thank you for the question, Mr. Cannings, and thank you for helping to organize this session. I think it's very important.
Collaborations are everything. We are in an era of a climate crisis. We can't be working in our silos. We must reach across and do multisector collaborations.
It depends on the project. For example, as I was saying earlier, in the high elevation monitoring program, we've collaborated with unlikely people who are now becoming water literate—the Alpine Club of Canada and high-elevation [Technical difficulty—Editor] managers. We know that we're past peak flow in the Columbia Basin, which means that we have diminishing returns in our water supply from glacial melt, which means that our recharge rates are changing and it means that snowpack is changing and all of these urgent things that people are now understanding in these partnerships.
We partner with Teck, the coal mine, in terms of looking at some of the water quality issues in the Elk Valley. We partner with indigenous partners.
I'll maybe defer to Georgia, who hasn't had a chance to speak about some of the partnerships she's developed through the foreshore management project that she's doing.