No. That has changed dramatically in the last, let's say, five or 10 years. The company that is engaged in that business has built a new ship that significantly reduces the amount of dust.
However, the most disturbing piece of this is that it's happening in Plumper Sound, which is outside of radar surveillance or other kinds of observation of the vessel. It operates at night. If you can imagine with me for a moment, the ship comes in and drops the anchor to a lot of din as the anchor chain goes over the side. The tugs come in, the barges come in. They connect up all the equipment, and they start transferring the gypsum onto these vessels with a lot of noise, in essentially a residential neighbourhood—right offshore.
You can well imagine that's disturbing for people. There are bright lights associated with that, so it's illuminated the entire time. It happens all night and is gone in the morning. You can imagine that those bright lights and that noise not only affect the residents of the area, but also potentially the wildlife—the birds and other animals that have their habitat in the seas there.