I guess, from ACOA's perspective, we shifted our focus in terms of how we deal with innovation six or seven years ago, when we established the Atlantic Innovation Fund.
The Atlantic Innovation Fund has had tremendous take-up. It has been oversubscribed. We have a lot of very worthy projects that are not competitively getting funded, because there are better projects. So one of the considerations we had to think about was whether we could get more resources for things like the Atlantic Innovation Fund.
From our perspective, the money we have that we can dedicate to innovation would be directed towards the Atlantic Innovation Fund and that particular method of delivery. It is a matter of choices, to a degree, and we feel that the role played by the CCFI, 20 years later, two decades later, has been accomplished. The industry and the institutions know each other. The importance of innovation in the milieu of fisheries development and that sort of thing has been acknowledged. Our approach has been to concentrate more on AIF, by default. Things like CCFI should be funded elsewhere.