Absolutely. They are in the report, so you'll see them in our strategy, but it's a lot to go into in a three-minute answer.
One key thing you mentioned that I really want to highlight is that, because we're a non-profit, we lose money every year in delivering our programming. We charge as little as we can, but that's still too expensive for most scientists. There simply aren't grants for ship time in the Arctic, or even for using our mobile labs in the Arctic for developing infrastructure. There are research grants and grants to pay universities to pay researchers, but rarely is there enough money for ship time, and it's based on southern costs, not northern costs.
What we do is stack programs. If they're operating in the same geographical area, we'll bring in the University of Manitoba and the University of Toronto, and we'll all work together. In that way it can be more affordable. Stacking programs is one important thing, but coordination and collaboration in general are key.