To deal with the last part of Mr. Byrne's question, it is true that if an objection is lodged, states will be able to continue to fish without hindrance until an entire process has gone through, which cannot be effectively concluded to overrule that during the fishing season.
The procedure is set up where there are panel procedures. It's not days and it's not weeks; it's months to go through the original procedure, which cannot reach a binding conclusion. Then there's a possible step, itself a very difficult step, to move to the UNCLOS or UNFA dispute settlement procedures, which normally are aimed at taking two to three years to conclude.
So the answer to your question is that if there's an objection lodged now, nothing in this convention will stop that—