That's fine. That's enough.
Let me get to the other question, and maybe you know more on this.
Around the seventies there was a Beaufort project related to ice in the north. At our committee, the last time the minister was here he talked about the pristine north, that it had to be protected for the Inuit and that even the people in his riding wanted it to be pristine.
Then he went on to talk about a third of the world's remaining oil and gas being there, or a quarter of the oil, and about all of the development and everything. But when I explained to him that scientists have explained there is no way of cleaning up oil under ice right now, and I asked him what they were going to do about that, he had no answer, even though he's a former environment minister. I know you talked about development. You're from a department of northern development, after all. So everyone wants development in your government, I'm sure. But what are you doing to ensure that the science is done so that we can find some way of dealing with oil spills under the ice and the potential contamination, so the development everyone wants can go ahead? Is there a resurrection of the Beaufort project? Was there enough in that data? Do you have more studies under way? What are we going to do about oil spills under ice?