No, not specifically, although I would make a couple of points with regard to the nuclear waste.
There are, of course, two types: the high-level waste that comes out of power reactors, and the low- and medium-level waste, some of which is from medical purposes in labs, hospitals, and so forth. There are two different processes for storing these, which my former colleagues at NRCAN referred to.
The one point to be made about these is that the waste from nuclear reactors in particular is very small in relation. It's a controlled volume, and it's completely under the control of the plant operator. They are in swimming pools at plants, so it is not as if the waste is untracked along large areas of the country, and similarly for the low and medium waste. As I said, a lot of this comes from hospitals, medical facilities, and so forth. They are easy to identify and easy to control, and, of course, the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission places restrictions on facilities that produce these wastes. There are regulations on how they are to treat waste of that nature.