Our legal obligation is the freshwater fishery. There have certainly been discussions about the offshore fishery, particularly off the Beaufort. There's no road access to that, so largely the activity right now comes from the delta, from Inuvik, Tuktoyaktuk, and Aklavik, and from some of the communities of Inuvialuit and Gwich'in that fish there. There are very few suitable port sites on Yukon's coastline, with the exception of perhaps Herschel Island, which is wedged between the Ivvavik National Park and Herschel Island Territorial Park.
But it is the area where we certainly are seeing some of the warmest trends going, some of the close to six degrees, if I'm not mistaken, in warming activity. It's probably one of the hotter areas in the world that's changing, so we are seeing a lot more ice-free conditions in that area. We actually are starting to see salmon—chinook salmon, and I believe there's been coho salmon—that have never been seen up there before. Maybe they're doing a little bit of a loop around the Bering Sea.
But again, it's not our mandate in the offshore.