Currently, a special review is triggered any time an OECD country removes all uses. Normally, if for any other reason we do a special review, there is a requirement that we have concerns that the health or environmental risks of a product were no longer acceptable.
This would apply if we get information in any way other than from a registrant company, or if it were provided as part of data from a province, or even if someone requested a special review. Any member of the public can request a special review. For those situations, we are required to actually initiate a special review to address that issue of concern, because we have a concern.
With respect to this particular provision for an OECD country, that test doesn't apply. There isn't that same test of there being a concern, so we have to initiate multiple special reviews, potentially, to address the same concern, which can come back.
Since 2013, we've done about 48 special reviews, 34 of which were for foreign decisions, the majority of which we had already addressed under other reviews or other decisions. The provisions that we're looking to get here would allow us to, in part, deal with that duplicative situation.