I think it's very difficult for them to meet demand in the future. As for capacity, we have to think outside the box as to how we're going to handle this. We were in Banff a couple of weeks ago at our annual meeting of the Alberta Federation of Agriculture. We sat right beside the railroads going through the mountains. They're very busy with consumer goods and all that stuff.
There is not going to be a quick answer. We may have to look outside the box to move the grain this year, and that is something we are going to have to look at into the future. Our production in western Canada will continue to grow with genetics, with research, with other things. The Canola Council of Canada announced that they want another 10 million tonnes by 2025 over 2015. There is no quick answer to this. We need to have rail service to move this crop out.
We have to have a long look at logistics. As Lynn mentioned, there may be some shipping reports and sales reports from the coast, which the Americans have, that may help the system. I would like to understand how many tonnes of grain we're moving through our port facilities, through the system—those numbers are available in the States but we don't have that in Canada. The sales numbers, too, could help us meet future targets.