Thank you, Chair, and thank you to the witnesses.
I'd like to get back to our study on research and the challenges we're facing. I'm really interested in the report that's been generated. I think it has base information that we need for this study, and the earlier we can get a hold of the report so we can go through it, the better.
My question, starting with Mr. Henheffer and then going over to Mr. Cockney, is about how research is different in the Arctic. With research in southern Canada, generally you have a university attached to a geographic area that applies for research funding and does research based on geography, with ties to other southern universities. In the Arctic, we don't have a university network, and often universities have to apply for NSERC funding and cobble together research grants to do Arctic research. I'm thinking of the PEARL research station up in Ellesmere Island in Eureka, where the University of Toronto has a main presence, but tries to cobble together enough research to study climate change and study permafrost with other universities around the world.
Could you talk about how we can provide a different way of networking research funds together that could either be led by a southern university or led by the people in the Arctic?