That provision you're talking about, that safeguard for countries who haven't signed on to the Basel Convention.... We've heard a lot about the agreement that was signed with the United States. It sounds like, from what you're saying, there are mechanisms in place to prevent them from exporting to countries who don't have the infrastructure to deal with it.
We just had a legal analysis, published by the Center for International Environmental Law, that highlighted major inconsistencies between Canada's legal obligations under the Basel Convention and the agreement the U.S. and Canada signed. Also referenced a few times at this committee was The New York Times article talking about how new trade data for January shows that American exports of plastic scrap to poorer countries have actually stayed the same, and scrap plastic exports overall have risen.
Environmental watchdogs are saying that this is evidence that they're ignoring the rules, and that American companies are actually interpreting the law and these new rules in ways that still allow them to ship overseas. I am just curious to know how Environment Canada is dealing with some of that information.