No, I don't think so. I'll take it from an economist's perspective and a business person's perspective as opposed to a rights perspective on this.
All projects, even national projects, happen locally. You build locally; you do things locally. You use local tradespeople; it's a local thing. You need to get a series of approvals in place, both for those who are rights holders to the land and for other businesses in the area. Municipalities and provincial governments need to work together. There is opportunity in that space around national projects to look out for those things. I hear what all my indigenous sisters and brothers are saying, that there are things we don't see in this bill. I think they should come forward and say this is the thing that we want to see to make us comfortable, or say that following the bill, here's the process that we need the government to put in place.
From an economics perspective—and you want some degree of certainty—you won't move projects unless you have people on board at a local level.