To the first part of your question about coordination on the international level, there are a number of long-running initiatives that Canadian scientists and research infrastructure participants are members of.
One is the Interact network, which is the International Network for Terrestrial Stations. There are well over 100 stations that are part of that, including quite a few from Canada, such as the station that I'm responsible for at Kluane, and the CEN stations that Warwick mentioned.
We are part of that network, and in that context we work with our international partners to do things like develop common protocols for environmental monitoring, and share data and information across that network. Ship-based coordination is a little different. It tends to happen with the institutions that own the vessels and the scientists who have those partnerships.
We don't, as I mentioned earlier, have a strategic plan for how we want to engage. Those things have tended to happen either at the level of the individual scientists, groups or consortiums of researchers or, as Henry Burgess talked about, through one government agency to another government agency internationally. We have an ongoing program—