The risk assessment looks at four hazards from a bee health perspective. The four of them are small hive beetle, amitraz-resistant varroa mites, oxytetracycline-resistant American foulbrood and Africanized bees.
There is a scientific process where it assigns risks to each of those subsets. If the risk level changes as a result of new scientific information that is available on surveillance, on control measures and on mitigation measures, that will allow us to re-evaluate and to re-quantify the risks that are there. It is based on a World Organisation for Animal Health process—the risk assessment itself. It is a scientific process where you can say that there is significant new information that changes our assessment from the 2013 or not.