With respect to escapes, one of the conditions of licence will be that people will have to report escapes, if and when they occur. Our feeling is that the number of fish that escape every year is quite small—it's not zero—and we want to ensure that every farm is required to report to us any escapes they've had, on a monthly basis, probably. It may be every two weeks—we haven't decided yet—but on a regular basis, anyway. We will publish that information, probably monthly, so that we will know what the level of escapes is.
In terms of repercussions if there is a major escape of thousands of fish, as part of the conditions of licence people will be given a permission essentially to conduct fishing to recapture those fish; there is a system in place for that. So the first avenue, if you will, is to attempt to recapture. That's not usually extremely successful; occasionally it is, but not enormously so.
The impact of the escapes, which was a commonly held concern eight or ten or twenty years ago, is of less concern to us now. We don't have any evidence of Atlantic salmon out-competing Pacific salmon or causing reproduction problems. We don't have any Atlantic salmon population that has grown up in the Pacific Ocean as a result of introductions and so on. So from our perspective, at least, environmental factors and concerns are limited.