Let's recognize, as I said earlier, that the regulation itself has not passed. If we had something in place that's akin to some of our internal thinking today, if you showed up in British Columbia and you wanted to start a fish farm, you require a provincial lease under the Land Act, you require two permits under the B.C. Fisheries Act, you require a permit under the Farm Practices Protection Act, and you require a permit under the Finfish Aquaculture Waste Control Regulation passed under the Environmental Management Act. So there are five licensing activities, so to speak.
On the federal side of the house, you require a habitat authorization, you require an introduction in transfers licence that's issued under section 56 of the fishery general regulation, and you require a Navigable Waters Protection Act approval, typically, at minimum.
Under the new regime the requirements on the provincial side will go from five to one, because four of the five will simply disappear. On the federal regime, we foresee a permit still being required for the Navigable Waters Protection Act purposes for a new site, and there will be a federal aquaculture licence, and that will be it. Any renewal will no longer require the NWPA permit, so the net effect is that you will go from five provincial decision points or licence activities to one, and four federal ones to two.