Senator WONG (South Australia—Minister for Foreign Affairs and Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:53): Thank you, Senator Cadell, for the question. Thank you also for your interview on the ABC this morning. I didn't agree with all of your comments, obviously, but it did demonstrate a real— Senator Scarr: Flattering someone else! Senator WONG: Do you want me to flatter you too, Paul? I'll get to you, okay? As a South Australian, I felt like you understood, as I do, and as so many of us do, what is happening in South Australia. I was really pleased that Senator Watt went to Adelaide on Monday and engaged with the community there. He had a look at what was occurring on, I think, Glenelg Beach— Senator Watt: West Beach. Senator WONG: West Beach—so he got to see it firsthand. I think we are all deeply concerned by the widespread marine species deaths occurring in my home state. We have acted to provide the government with $14 million to support their response to this event, and the Premier put out a press release—I think it was yesterday—which set out the various parameters or bases of the assistance, which includes clean-up, coastal monitoring, small-business grants and so forth. I'm sure you're across the detail of it. But I think there is a more profound problem here, which is that we know that the climate is changing, and we know that the best advice to date—I appreciate there is going to be a Senate inquiry, and scientists are also grappling with an event we've never seen before—tells us that, in part, a marine heatwave is one of the drivers behind this. We know our oceans are warming. I have spent a lot of my life on that coastline, and I can tell you— (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Cadell, first supplementary?