There are obviously, as the member has mentioned, a number of steps that should be taken in any kind of due diligence. One is obviously an options analysis. Another one would be a very good evaluation of the worth of the business, because establishing a price is always a process of negotiation, and so the government would have to have a very good idea of what the business was worth.
As in any kind of negotiation, what concessions are you willing to make? How much are those worth? What long-term agreements or commitments will be put in place? How do you protect public assets in that—should there be public assets? Or how do you protect public safety? Every crown corporation has, or should have, a public policy role. So how do you manage that aspect? It's not simply a question of selling the assets or the business, but the public policy role in all of that. Then you would need to have really good negotiators who are able to understand the business deals that will be made.
It is very unlikely that we would ever be involved in that, other than perhaps to express an opinion on how the transaction would be reflected in the books of the government.