I would echo that in terms of the numbers. We don't need the number of plants we used to have. We've had a significant reduction from 200-plus in the groundfish days. As we've gone through shellfish, we're down now to somewhere around 60 to 70 plants in the province. I've always joked that we need one per electoral district, and we'd be happy with that, with 40-odd—I guess it would be 30-odd now—at the provincial level.
We need tens of millions of dollars, and here's the trick. As the biomass goes up, if we trickle up in terms of supply or landings it won't support the investment. You need to have a significant quantity of fish available to you to support the investment. My members are principally in shellfish right now. If we're going to transition to groundfish, we need a lot of capital, and we need the fish to sustain it. That's going to be the challenge: finding the balance between increasing fishing now and getting a sufficient amount to justify the investment.