We did that yesterday. We used declarations all the time.
I think the first question you have to deal with is, does KVD do what it's supposed to do? I do not believe there's any evidence. We're operating on the assumption that KVD is actually allowing us to identify quality classes. There are genetic and environmental differences, and we've heard about the environmental impacts on this from year to year. We have frost some years and rain other years, so you're not getting a constant product from the same variety.
It's important in the marketplace for anything that you actually measure the quality of the product, and this is what a black box should do. A black box shouldn't just identify variety, which is what KVD does; we have other factors that come in. We measure protein concentration—this was a step that had to be fought for tooth and nail before the Canadian Grain Commission would allow it to be introduced.
Falling numbers is another one that should be introduced and be part of your black box technology.
This is where we should be putting our money. We should not be wasting time and effort on trying to look for something to replace KVD. Declarations do that in a better fashion than what KVD does right now.
So to operate from this basis is incorrect.