We do a lot of collaboration internally with federal government departments, academic organizations, Arctic and northern peoples and municipalities.
At an international level, we do coordinate in particular and by choice with the United Kingdom. In terms of the other polar nations, most of that is through networks, research dissemination and having conversations about how we can learn best practices from each other, because technologies and tools that may have been developed, as you mentioned, in Norway, Sweden and Finland may not work in the Canadian Arctic. They have access by rail to their northernmost regions. That's not going to be a factor for our regions, so we need to coordinate with them, understand how we can learn from each other and look at opportunities like CINUK to enable that international collaboration.