Thank you.
The question I have, and this is what strikes me about this comment, is that when we look at cases, as was talked about in the opening brief, of extreme weather, the impacts of increase in temperature in the Far North—I mean, direct health impacts of that—and we talk about smog days and the average increase in temperature, why Health Canada has gone through the rigour of looking at the pollutant side, but when I look through all of your graphs in terms of wet sulphates, particulates, affected ozone levels, all of these are directly correlated, not exclusively to temperature.