First of all, hello, Lawrence. I remember you well from my days in Ottawa. It's nice to see you again.
I'm going to be very careful as well, because as a member of the national delegation I'm really only an advisor to the head of our delegation, who frequently doesn't take much advice from me. It's just a very frustrating problem to get Greenland, first of all, to admit to the fact that controls are necessary. Also, it's a little easy to understand, given their complex geography, the difficulty they have in exercising control, because they're dealing with hundreds of miles of shoreline and very small fishing villages and so on, where it's almost impossible for the government to exercise any real control—any real count, let alone control. But I think we're making progress. I think there is a consensus developing that Greenland has to reduce and control its count, so that the figure is in the area of 25 or so tonnes. But so long as they can point at Canada and say we're taking five times that many in Labrador, let's say, or the combination of Labrador and Quebec and elsewhere, we have a pretty tough argument to make. It's just a great frustration to all concerned.