On hake, we have reached a tentative arrangement with the Americans and are living by that arrangement while they ratify the treaty, so the sharing is no longer an issue. We don't, therefore, have unilateral quotas set by Canada and the U.S. that add up to more than the scientific advice. So that's good news.
On the issue of factory ships versus onshore processing, we have a balance that we need to negotiate there with all the parties. The fishermen, as you may be aware, get paid more for taking their fish to factory ships, and of course the plants and the communities want more employment in the processing operations, but they can't always process all the fish. So there is a series of discussions that happen each year relevant to what the markets are looking like that year, what the price differences are, and what the right share should be to maximize the value of that fishery for Canadians.
Also, on the estimate of catch, that is always a challenge. We do have people on-board to verify the estimates, but I agree that it's not a precise science in that we can't measure it to the pound or to the kilo, but we do have reasonable confidence that we are, collectively with the Americans, living within the scientific advice.