I'd just like to echo some of those comments.
Like everyone, I think, in the seed industry, the Canadian Seed Trade Association is very supportive of a science-based regulatory system. To build on that, though--and to answer your question--we can't predict what is going to be acceptable from time to time in different regions around the world. I think we need to focus on having a trusted, science-based model in place, and trusted not just internationally; we really have to work on building the trust of that system here at home.
We need traceability. We need the systems in place to deal with these things as they come along. In terms of KVD, if we look to the future, we're not going to be able to distinguish genetically modified from non-genetically modified by how the kernels look, clearly. We see a need to move to that next generation, where we can really do an effective job of segregating and streaming these things. I think we really need to focus on the process and the system.
If we look at, for example, the soybeans we're growing in Ontario, the vast majority of what's being grown out there is genetically modified. But we're also leading the world in the export of food-grade non-GMO products into high-value markets like Japan, for example.
So I think things can coexist. We just need to focus on getting the system in place.