They're not ahead of us. There are big problems in Norway. There are big problems in southwest Scotland. Scotland has actually taken the action of designating their most valuable, important wild salmon areas as no-aquaculture zones, so they have aquaculture-free zones in Scotland.
There's huge concern in Norway about the impacts of aquaculture on wild salmon runs and threatening a very lucrative recreational fishing industry or sport fishing industry in Norway. Sea lice is a big, big problem. Escapes are a big problem.
Our best experience, or what I know best from a regulatory point of view, is what goes on in eastern Canada compared with what goes on in Maine. In Maine, because the few wild Atlantic salmon left in the State of Maine have been placed on the endangered species list, there are much stricter and more stringent regulatory controls that the industry has to live up to in order to do business--in Cobscook Bay, in Maine, which is not very far across.... I mean, you can see across from the St. Andrews wharf to Maine. The very same players in the industry are working under a much more rigorous regulatory framework in Maine than they are only a few miles away in the Bay of Fundy.