Certainly, the commercial fishery was ratcheted down and virtually shut down over the last number of years.
With respect to Greenland, a number of years ago there was an agreement by them to move to a subsistence fishery and not to have a commercial fishery. Some groups, the salmon conservation groups, actually paid for that to happen, which creates a desire to keep the process going. There's always an opportunity to see what you can get in negotiations by moving to claim that you're going to reopen a commercial fishery.
We don't compensate countries, obviously, for that kind of thing. What we are going to do is to continue through NASCO, the North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization, to push for Greenland to live up to its international responsibilities to conserve Atlantic salmon in its home waters. Those are our salmon from Canada.