Oh, okay, that's good.
Mr. Pomerleau, thank you for coming again. It's good to see you here. I know the producers know the value you provide for them. We recognize the importance of the work you do for an industry that it seems to me rides a roller coaster a lot in terms of its strength in markets and revenues.
My understanding is that you are the third-largest exporter of pork in the world, at a little under $3 billion, and that shouldn't go unnoticed. It's more than that now. To our colleagues around the table, I think when we're talking about the significance or the urgency of making sure that we move ahead, particularly with Panama this time, it reflects, in terms of an industry that is basic to Canada, a lot about how important it is that we would be able to move ahead.
The question came up about an easier resolution to the conflict issue, and we go back to the COOL. In the United States, as we continue to move forward with that, and hopefully have that resolution that was made a long time ago, do you recognize two things? One is that this now gives a diversity of markets when those things happen; is that of significance? Two, if that type of non-tariff barrier jumps in front of us again, do you see this type of a resolution being better?