I fully agree with you in this case, because the effectiveness of these measures hasn't been proven and there's a safety issue for fishers. I don't think low-breaking-strength rope is the solution. I strongly believe that there should be no rope in the water. I'm a firm believer in on‑demand buoy technology. The buoy sits on the sea bottom, there's no rope, and when it's time to harvest the catch, you raise the buoy to the surface, empty the trap and lower it back down.
As I was telling you, this year, 18 of our fishers tried out this technology, and I spent a lot of time talking to the captains to get their opinion. The ones who weren't believers initially and said this method was silly became fervent converts. This is a revolutionary approach that gets ropes out of the water. I think it deserves to be promoted more. We're not quite experts at using this method, but it seems obvious to me that this is the way of the future, especially in comparison with low-breaking-strength rope.