Thank you.
The closed containment floating system is very unique in that it has a solid-wall system that floats in the ocean and isolates the salmon from the surrounding environment. It takes water in--you'll get this information, as I believe AgriMarine is going to present to you later next week--at depth, which avoids a lot of the potential contaminants, brings it into the tanks, circulates it in the tanks so that it has a current to keep the fish active, and then creates almost a vortex, a mild vortex, if you will, that's like a bathtub. It draws the waste out the bottom, takes the water away, separates out the solids, and recirculates the water back into the ocean.
It keeps the fish contained. It avoids a lot of the potential for contamination and transfer of disease. Of course, it's a multi-tank system, so you can stage the growth of the fish through various tanks. If for some reason or other you happen to come across a problem in one of the tanks, you can simply isolate it and move to another tank. It's an evolution, if you will, from the net-pen process to a solid-wall process, working on a lot of similar theories.