There are internationally recognized and internationally validated hazard identification and hazard assessment types of methodologies. The European Union, as Mr. Glover has mentioned, already has in place what is referred to as a general product safety directive. They rely on a variety of standards and internationally recognized approaches to identify hazards and mitigate those hazards. They go through an entire step-wise approach to assessing those risks.
There is a lot of that type of intelligence and that type of information out there that gives great guidance for industry to determine what would constitute that danger to human health and safety. Of course, the types of requirements that we have stipulated already in our regulations would also be a signal.
That type of science and those standards are continually being assessed and revised. New ones are being implemented. All of these will be the foundation on which industry can rely to get an idea of what would constitute due diligence.
In most cases, responsible industry is carrying out a lot of these types of approaches through their product design, through their ongoing quality control and quality assurance measures. So this is obviously not a novel approach. The European Union, in fact, introduced its first directive on general product safety in 1992, and modified it in 2001. These types of concepts and how to respect them are well established.