I have just one point on the regulation issue. I agree with David that we're not seeing enforcement of regulations, but in terms of some of the regulations that are in place, currently one that we have one in British Columbia, the aquaculture waste control regulation, is probably the most comprehensive regulation we have around aquaculture. It looks at how companies have to manage their waste, monitor their impacts on the aquatic environment and the benthic environment, and try to determine whether their farms are required to be fallowed. It regulates the amount of tonnage of fish on sites. There are various things that are in place here.
The federal government is now in charge of developing new regulations pursuant to a Supreme Court order, and that is currently in place. They're looking at the existing regulations in the province of British Columbia and using an amended version of them. That amended version, in our view, is very much watered down compared to the regulation currently in place. It actually is a regulation geared towards the expansion protocol that I spoke of earlier, the national aquaculture strategic action plan initiative. That initiative is calling not for more farms, but for bigger farms on sites through increasing the number of net pens and increasing the total tonnage of fish. The environmental regulation around sites and the kind of monitoring required is being significantly reduced. We have some very serious concerns about that.