Certainly, with respect to your comment around losing the fine minds, or not acquiring them in the first place, it's very much a concern. For us it has been the subject of many, many resolutions at annual meetings over a period of time, as we saw that through natural attrition, or for other reasons, positions were becoming vacant and simply not being replenished. That is in part certainly due to constraints around government funding, and also to some changes in approaches in the private sector as well. From our perspective, there's a huge deficiency in a number of areas in our research capacity in Canada, whether it's plant breeding or other types of science and specialties in the different crop disciplines. That's very much a concern.
As far as agri-innovation goes, yes, certainly it has brought a different approach and is a compelling reason, I guess, to approach thinking within the industry in a more organized and forward-thinking manner. That's always a good thing. I think part of the challenge around the program, certainly with cluster one, has been in rolling out anything new, and the logistics around doing it, and the learning that comes from delivering a program. We're certainly looking forward to cluster two, and we hope that some of the challenges around the delivery, the rollout, and the processing of payments will improve. It's a program we support, and we very much would support a third iteration of a similar program in the next strategic framework.