Thank you, Mr. Chairman. The department has done well in balancing the two in regard to the BHP project. It negotiated a socio-economic agreement. We also have the environmental agreement, which is a landmark in itself. In that first project, I think the public and ourselves are certainly satisfied that we have taken care of both sides of our particular mandate very well.
The Mackenzie River Basin Master Agreement is something that has taken us about 15 years to deal with. We have signed that off, I think all parties, in July. That is a major accomplishment on the environmental side. We have not done anything on a large scale, on the industrial side in recent months. I would suggest that we are concentrating too heavily in that area, but we are working on, for instance, simplifying the rules for acquiring permits for oil and gas exploration. We have suggested that we want to streamline the regulatory regime for businesses in the north. These do not necessarily have an environmental side to balance off with. I would say on the whole, the first major project, BHP, I think as a rule, everybody is satisfied that the government did well, in meeting the mandate of Resources, Wildlife and Economic Development. Very well in that case. That has been the first testing ground of this new department. Thank you.