That's a very good question.
We can only take appropriate action against a regulated party in Canada. We can't take any extra-territorial action outside of Canada. What we have done with the new requirements—again, I keep going back to them because they're so significant and we haven't had this tool before—is that if we do find that a Canadian importer has fraudulently brought in food and called it something else, we could take action on that. That's one element. As I said, it would depend, case by case, on what the inspector would like to do.
At the same time—and this is something we've been trying to convey to importers—if we found that an importer sourced from someone who has misled them, we'll go back and find out if they fixed their sourcing material. We recognize that people can buy fish and be misled themselves.
What we tend to require is a corrective action plan to demonstrate how they then would perhaps fix the problem the next time around.