I understand, Mr. Chair, that this question was addressed to me, and I can give it a start. There might others who can speak to it as well.
My experience is mostly in this section below Montreal, so that's where I would have seen some examples of some shoreline work that's been done through conservation authorities and some other programs, particularly with emphasis on those soft techniques.
We've had discussions, particularly with our partners, the Mohawks of Akwesasne, who have had some issues and have had some engineering done on shoreline restoration, using those soft techniques. This is more or less recounting back what was passed on to me.
There was a moderate success rate. The issue with the shoreline work that they've seen is that the overgrowth and the soft structures haven't, in several cases, lasted the length of time that they had anticipated. While it did mitigate and slow down the erosion, the long-term effect was still a continuance of erosion.
In particular, this work was done on—