Thank you for the question.
Royal Greenland is a corporation wholly owned by the government of Denmark. They have made acquisitions in Nova Scotia of A&L Seafoods and of Quin-Sea in Newfoundland. It's one of Newfoundland's largest processors.
None of these actions are in keeping with federal law. Royal Greenland is taking from the people of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia and creating profit for a foreign government. It seems beyond reason that regulators wouldn't have taken issue with it by this point.
We see the same thing with domestic companies as well. In Nova Scotia, we've seen Champlain—which is an equity firm designed to generate profits for shareholders—acquire Lobsters ‘R’ Us Seafood, Premium Seafoods, Captain Dan’s Seafood, Chéticamp Fisheries, Riverside Lobster International, Downeast Cape Bald Packers and Petit De Grat Packers. There are even more subsidiaries, including Cape Bald, as well as Boston Lobster Company and Boston Wholesale Lobster in the United States.
Most ominously, we see Champlain and others operating along the same lines. They're starting to move into the acquisition of bait dealers and bait freezers and packers in Atlantic Canada. It's very ominous for us.
Some of these acquisitions are a bit of a paper tiger, in the sense that fishermen in Nova Scotia still have free will to sell their catch to whomever they choose. Some of these lobster buyers that are being acquired are being acquired because of their access to product, but at any time, fishermen could leave those buyers and move to another one, so we've seen their intent move into trying to control the bait supply to ensnare fishermen in the future. It's very concerning to the industry.