Certainly. In the past we have had incidents when we were changing our regulations. For example, a few years ago, we put in new regulations to govern active pharmaceutical ingredients, specifying that this is how you make them to make sure they're safe. Under the current regulations, changing and introducing new fees, took two to three years in our experience. It wasn't rapid enough to bring in new costing for that framework, so we had inspectors going out and resources deployed by the department, and yet we couldn't catch up with the regime.
This new mechanism would allow us, by ministerial order, with consultation with all of the resolution mechanisms, to move a lot more quickly and to harmonize the many new regulations coming in that we are looking at departmentally.