That is something that we definitely focus on significantly. I like to describe it as a value chain, because we know that if we continue to build the way that we've built in the past, our infrastructure won't withstand the climate shifts that we're already living through and that we're going to live in during the future.
Infrastructure Canada has invested and worked significantly with the National Research Council, provinces and territories, and the Standards Council on resiliency and the kinds of building materials and the kind of code we should be building towards as we look at our infrastructure.
We've also been supporting climate tools through the FCM and what we're going to be releasing in the fall, so that municipalities that often have very limited staff have more capabilities to access the information and the technology that they need to understand their critical infrastructure and understand what investments need to be made.
Then, of course, we've had the disaster mitigation and adaptation fund, which has supported just over 100 projects for over a couple of billion dollars, and actually, this past Friday, more proponents were informed of their success in receiving funds through that particular program for just under a billion dollars.