In terms of the conditional registration, it's very clear when that can be used. The data to conduct a risk assessment, both for human health and for the environment, has to be sufficient for the PMRA to be able to conduct their full risk assessment without those data that are conditional. It's not that there is missing data that they're guessing at on the risk elements. It's that they have enough data to make their risk assessment decision from both a health and an environmental perspective.
What the conditional registration often does is give them the ability to request additional data. Maybe it's confirmatory data or maybe it's on a bigger scale than what was submitted during the evaluation. It's to confirm that the assumptions and the risk assessment they've made are indeed what it is. This has been used for a number of products.
In fact, it's used for bee health products, for products used in a beehive. There's one that's very commonly used by beekeepers that has a conditional registration currently. It's a fairly common practice, and it should not be perceived as a data gap. It is confirmatory data, and I think the PMRA has explained that to the Senate committee on pollinator health in good detail.