Thank you very much. You said that quite well.
At the NWMO, we've had an indigenous knowledge policy since 2016. We were one of the first to implement something of that nature in North America.
Why I am really proud of that is that it embeds in our work that we will respect indigenous knowledge and the owners of that knowledge. It really is indigenous people's thoughts and their work and their contribution. We need to be very respectful if they gift it to us to allow us to use it in our work. We accept that gift, but we also respect that it is still theirs to protect and that we need to protect it with them.
I think you can do both. I think that when we're working in the communities we're working with, we're building a relationship with the people there. We want to build a trusting relationship and we look forward to that.
With that trust—