Sure. What the government keeps saying about that is that we're not risking nuclear arms in Canada or non-proliferation in Canada. That's not the issue. It's the signal, and it makes it very clear in the letter from the U.S. non-proliferation experts, that it's the signal that it's giving to other countries.
In particular, South Korea has been trying to do the same type of technology, pyroprocessing, for more than 10 years and the United States has not given it permission because of the very volatile nuclear situation on the Korean peninsula.
Just last week, I was looking at a video from the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency. They are very concerned about a new nuclear test by North Korea.
The Korean peninsula is extremely volatile. What they're concerned about in the U.S. is if Canada starts doing this technology called pyroprocessing, it basically gives the green light to South Korea to do the same thing, and it risks destabilizing a very fragile situation right now with nuclear weapons around the world. You know that this is in the news every day. It's a very fragile situation right now around the world. They're concerned about why Canada is giving the signal that this type of technology is okay, given that there was an informal ban on it for many years in Canada.