No. In the Broughton Archipelago, the first nations never engaged in a financial arrangement, and they now have the authority to remove the farms. They are doing that. We are going to get a chance to see what happens when you remove these farms—first place anywhere in the world.
I am hearing from many nations. They may have signed agreements years ago, but I don't think there are any nations who signed an agreement that said, “You are going to lose your wild salmon. We'll take care of you—you'll have farmed salmon—but you're going to lose your wild salmon.” Nations, and probably almost everybody, thought we could have both the farmed salmon and the wild salmon. However, that isn't happening here, and it's not happening in Norway, Scotland, Ireland, Faroe Islands or Chile—well, Chile doesn't have wild salmon—or eastern Canada.
The industry isn't coexisting with wild salmon anywhere in the world, so there is no place we can look to as an example of how to go forward here.