Yes, the NAFTA North American label working group has had volunteers from several of the companies bringing forward products for NAFTA labelling. The group includes a number of the bigger companies.
I don't believe the list of products the committee is working on is on the site yet, but there's actually a meeting coming up in March at which we will be talking about the next one. I think the second one will be coming out very soon, in time for 2007. There are also several more that will be coming out in the next year or two.
They're like everybody else. They want to move cautiously, but they want to move forward on this idea. It really would facilitate movement of product back and forth, especially when you have, say, a grasshopper outbreak and you use every pound of the insecticide that's available in Canada. You don't have time to rebag, relabel, and so on, so if the product is labelled so that it can move across the border as fast as a truck, then we will have had real success.
If I may, can I go back to one of your earlier statements about how the growers want OUI? I think the growers want access to glyphosate. That's really what they want, and it's a shame that the company that owns the rights to this product is the only one that refused to take part in the GROU pilot.
It's like the old story. When the piper's already playing your song, why do you have to pay him? That company is already selling all the product they want through the border, so it wasn't prepared to participate. If OUI was off the table, the company would be at the table the next day for GROU, and then glyphosate would be available. So it, too, could be available under this program. There's no question about that.