If I could just speak very quickly to that, the marketplace changes everyday. It creates winners and losers by the very nature of the marketplace.
Two canola crushing plants have been announced for Yorkton. So for people who are within a freight effective area of Yorkton, it fundamentally changes the way they farm, the value of their farm, what they will grow going forward, and their net economic return. Those things have all changed. The marketplace did that.
An ethanol plant will be announced that will create a different marketplace in areas that get drawn to that. Wheat Board or no Wheat Board, those are just commercial impacts. The value of somebody's farm, the way they do business, and how they do business will change.
What that does is displace other areas. So in our specific area in southern Saskatchewan, as people grow less durum in some other areas because they're not freight effective, it opens the door to a greater durum marketing opportunity for us.
So it's very difficult to say there will be winners here and losers there.
I've been to Blaine Lake as well, and there are some unique marketplace effects in Blaine Lake. Perhaps that will get to more livestock because they're going to be close to an ethanol plan, and they'll be able to get distillers' grain to feed their livestock cheaper. It would be incredibly difficult to try to evaluate all of the impacts of the marketplace within this.
You're correct. We created a template to move forward with, but we can't investigate each of those possible impacts.