I don't want to eat crickets.
It's a question of balance. It has been a question of management. It's not that easy. It's ecosystem management, and it's not that simple.
It's easier to manage terrestrial animals than marine animals, first of all, because in marine management, everything is moving more than in terrestrial management. As I said earlier, we are entering a period when everything will move because of climate change, and we can already observe a lot of change.
Ten years ago, it would have been easier to take a decision like that. It would have been easier to take a decision to manage the population of seals 10 years ago, but now it's more delicate. It's more touchy to do something like that today, because we know that we are at a point where the harbour seal, as an example, is at the top of the predatory curve, and we know that the fish population is going down, so we are at the step where there is a gap and the population is supposed to go down.
Now we have to evaluate the risk of putting important pressure on the harp seal while knowing that there are changes that are coming, whereas we could have done something 10 years ago to manage the population.