Then where's the disconnect? As you identify, you're a customer, but we're harvesting 18,000 seals or somewhere around that. We need more customers than you and whoever else you identified to sustain a harvest that's estimated to have to be about 600,000 animals to stabilize the seal population and reduce it to a manageable level that would not have that impact on other fisheries. While that's okay to say, you need a substantive customer base.
This is where I'm about to go to Mr. Jones—and I believe you may have commented on it as well, Ms. Boudreau. Do we have the adequate infrastructure to harvest that capacity of animals at sea and get them back to land in a state that an entrepreneur can process as sellable products? I'm referring to the fishing fleet. I'm not familiar with it in Newfoundland, but you're dealing with a very bulky, large animal and you have to get it back to a processor in a state that the processor can do something with. Do we have the adequate infrastructure to harvest effectively at sea?
I ask because if we don't solve that problem, you're not going to build that customer base or market base. You have to be able to target and get enough animals back to shore on a sustained basis, on a long-term basis, that would give the confidence to the processor to process.
Would you comment, Ms. Boudreau, and then Mr. Jones? And then I'll be in overtime.