I think it's important to understand that we are not the reactor operator; we are not the reactor licensee in the world. What we do is we receive medical isotopes from reactors around the world, including the NRU reactor. The dialogue, in terms of restarting the NRU reactor, was a dialogue between Atomic Energy of Canada and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, a licensee-licensor dialogue, to which we are not privy. So what we have done is we get information from AECL, the best information that they have available, on the restart.
As I said earlier in my opening remarks, during that first period in November--the last week of November--it was in a state of flux. It wasn't clear when the reactor would restart or what would be required to restart it. Even with that uncertainty, we took the step to contact all of our suppliers and asked them to start sending material to us. So in fact the protocol worked.
The issue I mentioned earlier in my discussions is there is a world-wide capacity limitation that cannot replace NRU. We do not have the authority to start up another reactor in another country. Of course it's not our authority to do so.