That's a good question. I'd be speculating on just what their knowledge of the ecology of the Arctic is. They're all literate in Arctic research, and if there's collaborative science being done, I'm sure they're part of it.
As to what's being done at the global level, as far as I know, there's not a great deal. I think the silver bullet people talk about is setting up a regional fisheries management organization and having a moratorium. I know that in the United States they have had differences of opinion on moratoriums.
It's the coastal states that will have to lead efforts to limit Arctic fishing. The way to do that is to use the agreement on straddling fish stocks to try to push coastal state jurisdiction farther out beyond our EEZ, which of course we have done off the coast of Newfoundland and in other areas as well.
We are a member of I think four or five of these different agreements. In many of these regional fisheries management organizations in which we are a party, Japan, South Korea, and in many cases China are also members. So there is already a dialogue ongoing with these countries, at least on fisheries management.
That's certainly the place to start.