We believe that ultimately the impact will be that there will be more choice in terms of what farmers in western Canada can grow. Again, we feel that we're just on the verge now of having a bit of a revolution in western Canada with respect to the end use for the products and that we're no longer strictly dependent on the export market for high-quality CWRS type wheat. But there are going to be a lot more value-added opportunities within Canada, be that going into different feed operations or ethanol-type operations.
What we're really looking at is how we maximize the return on a per acre basis back to a farmer. We feel it's pretty clear at this point that there are more options out there that aren't available to that grower, options that would decrease their dependency on other inputs, such as fungicides and so on, by using improved genetics.
We just would like to see that there are as many options and as many profitable options and more profitable options made available to producers so that they're not in the situation where they're growing a product that is unduly constrained in certain ways to meet the requirements of KVD so they end up producing a much higher-quality product, but lower yield, and shipping that into a market that doesn't really require that type of quality profile.