Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to all the witnesses for being here today.
I'm not sure if Ms. Sonnenberg is back on, so I will start with Mr. Sullivan. I'd like to go back to Royal Greenland. We saw this with shrimp a couple of years ago. I'm seeing this year, with lobster and crab in my riding, that this company is on the wharf and offering two dollars or three dollars or four dollars a pound more for some of the resources.
When you're a fisherman and you're offered those kinds of prices, you tend to sell to the person who is offering you more, right? On the other hand, are you also telling your fishermen what the impact of that can be? We all know that after they offer those prices, maybe in the next couple of years they will just say, “Hey, we buy everything here”, and the prices will be as low as possible.
What do you think we can do as a government to stop that? It's very, very troubling to me that it's happening. I have raised that a couple of times, and I think our government is prepared to look at it. What do you think is the solution here?