The seed industry is a completely different industry. We're reliant on other companies outside of Canada, really, to produce seed for the majority of what we do. Again, there are a lot of differences if you're looking at getting stock for apple trees or vines for grapes. But if you're going into fruit and vegetables, where you're actually putting a chemical coating on the seed to protect against, as you said, the flea beetle....
The neonicotinoid issue right now is directly related to corn and soybeans. Outside of that, there has been no other movement, but I think the precedent that this has set is very dangerous for the agricultural industry, and it could present problems down the road if somebody decided to pick something as the next evil target and then legislation is made around that. That's where the danger comes in. Right now, our access to seed and chemically treated seed is all done through the PMRA. The studies are all there. Everything is science-based. Right now, there are no issues on getting seed for doing what we do. There is an abundance, and we have some good controls on some of those things.
Sometimes people don't understand the environmental benefit of some of these controls compared to what was done when my grandfather farmed. Farmers use the best technology and the best information of the day to make their decisions. They've done that right since the beginning of time, and that continues to happen. As new information comes out, farmers embrace it.
Farmers have to work directly with the chemicals. They are the ones most exposed and most at risk, and most farm families are very healthy people. Being able to put this on the seed protects the farmer and his family, but also protects the environment and is a better thing, so we should embrace that kind of science and technology.