Thank you for the question.
Yes, it is a core part of our mandate, as you say, and as outlined in our statement of priorities and accountabilities. We are absolutely fulfilling a role of providing advisory support.
As I was mentioning in response to an earlier question from MP Rogers, our role starts with providing advisory support to the potential borrower in how to structure these types of investments. It could be a public...or a province, a municipality or an indigenous community, or the private sector.
We're doing that on projects like Georgina Island, where we're working with a first nation on the potential to build a new road that connects their community, or Taltson, which is a hydroelectric project in the Northwest Territories where we're working with the government.
So yes, we provide that sort of advice on how to structure a deal. When they get to the detailed stage of investment, that's when we would bring in the third party expertise and due diligence. As Monsieur Duguay was describing, that would usually be for legal, but also for market and technical support. Notwithstanding that, we have an incredible staff. There is market-by-market understanding of what the demand and the offtake are, and what the reasonable construction cost is that we would go to a third party for.