I would just comment on buying early and worrying about storage and environmental issues.
In our program, at least, you can acquire the product without having to worry about storage, because you're buying it, and by the time it moves through the system--our fall purchases will actually arrive in late February or March--there are not nearly the issues. The bins have been lowered with the moving of some of the grain, so the grain storage will move into fertilizer storage.
On the issue of ammonium nitrate, we brought that in earlier, through Churchill, for fall application, for the most part, over the top. It is more environmentally sound. Ammonium nitrate doesn't volatilize and doesn't denitrify, as compared with urea, which is the only product available in Canada for that purpose. So there is an environmental benefit to using that product and having it brought in during that time. That is a major issue.
I agree with Bob on the cash advances. If we could shift that down and find some way of getting cash advances, particularly low-cost cash advances...because one of the input costs that we haven't mentioned here is interest. With the amount of debt we're carrying--we've dug ourselves into a hole here--just a small change in interest rates has a huge impact on our cost of production. It is one of our significant input costs.
Again, I'm not sure what government can do in that area, but I do know it shows up on the P and L as being a significant issue.