Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your presentations today. As you can see, the diversity of opinions is actually very good. It ends up with a stronger agreement at the end of the day.
Mr. Lomas, you said that most of the fisheries, and maybe I'm paraphrasing a little, that you're export driven. The vast percentage and the last groups that we had basically said the same thing. Is it not important to have diversity of markets? You rely a lot just on the American market and I understand, and you made the comment about Japan. The point with Japan is they want fresh fish. They don't want it canned. That's the difference there.
Is there any strength then in having diversity of markets in keeping the Americans honest? We found that when we were negotiating with them on country of origin labelling, on beef and pork, and we also found it on softwood lumber, which is still under discussion, that if you have other markets that create demand, then the Americans tend to toe the line and become fair traders rather than just free traders. Is there strength in having that diversity?