Sure. We have done research, and I think the story needs to be told more broadly. We know that tens of millions of dollars have been brought into Canada from U.S. foundations in the early 2000s and have been also mixed in with Alaskan salmon interests to demarket farm salmon. This happened in the early 2000s. Since then, opposition to the sector has been picked up, but all of that seed funding has resulted in what I think Ms. Collins was talking about, which is this broader antagonism towards the sector based on practices that....
The sector is 50 years old in British Columbia. It's not very old. It's about 45 years old. That's only a few generations of production. When we started the production in British Columbia, was it perfect? Absolutely not. Has it been massively improved? Yes, it has. What we find in social media, for instance, in the criticisms, is that they always recycle. It's very hard to stop these things and to correct these things. It's reached a point, obviously, where the Liberal government believed this opposition was so strong that it needed to shut things down.
That is really not what public polling says. Public polling says there are concerns, which we recognize. We can make changes to our industry, quite dramatic changes, with existing technology. You do not need to shut down net pens. That is so extreme. This is what I think all of this opposition has been pointing to.
Can you imagine? Again, on the science perspective, we go from CSAS reports saying that we pose no more than “minimal risk” to wild salmon to suddenly saying that we have to shut down, that it's 100% risk and it has to go away. That's exactly what this decision is, banning open-net salmon farms. It seems like there is almost a shadow government of environmentalists that is trying to control the minister to shut us down, which is, again, so extreme. I'm sorry, but I will say that the NDP has been a big part of that.