Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Dairy farmers in my riding, and farmers in general, have a really basic, straightforward question when it comes to these negotiations, so perhaps this can go between the five of you. They feel that they themselves can compete because of our quality standards, our environmental regulations, our strict definition of what constitutes certain products, our protections through our inspection systems, legislative safeguards, plus they feel they have some good marketing and they cooperate when they're selling, and above all it's efficient production.
So they ask this one question, and this is what troubles them, I believe, as it does me: when we negotiate, why would we allow imports that do not meet those same standards of production, of safety assurance, of quality inspection, environmental security, and even the definitional consistency, so that what we would hold to be milk-like ends up being not milk or the definitions are obviously contrary? They know what they have to do to produce a quality product. They want to know that if they have to compete, what comes in has to meet the same standards and rigour, the same level playing field, in essence.