We had eight round tables that included a whole suite of indigenous organizations and representations. One of the things we did, at the request of people who were meeting with us—organizations that were meeting with us, in many cases, and in some cases at our request—was to put in place essentially the Chatham House rule. For people to feel they could speak freely and bluntly, we gave people assurance that we wouldn't debrief specifically on what individual organizations or people said in our consultations. That's quite normal.
That said, we did ask every organization to submit a formal submission to our website, and those are all summarized in a summary document. What we can say is that we decided, right off the bat, probably within the first month of our operations, that the concept of listening to indigenous interests and ensuring that the transition to net zero happened in such a way that they could benefit equally from the economic upside was going to be absolutely critically core to our philosophy and our work.
That's a generic answer.