A significant purchaser of top-quality Canadian wheat right now is a firm in the U.K. by the name of Warburtons, which is actually going beyond the services that are offered traditionally by the Canadian Wheat Board or the Canadian Grain Commission to do their own identity preservation. So in many cases, if we want those very top-quality markets, if they truly demand and truly want the very best product, they're prepared to step up and pay a little bit of a premium for that.
Internationally, in terms of what's happening in other countries, we see that there is excellent-quality wheat being grown, for example, in North Dakota. In many cases they are varieties that are not eligible for registration in Canada due to, in some cases, KVD restrictions. A lot of those varieties offer not just very competitive agronomics, but improved fusarium tolerance and a whole array of additional benefits to growers.
But coming back to the segregation issue within Canada, it's our belief that an affidavit system that's backed up with some form of verification would be adequate to meet the needs of the vast majority of those markets. If any specific markets require that added degree of traceability, we've demonstrated that the industry can certainly do that.