If I could, very briefly, honourable member, at the end of the day we will have equivalent measures across the country. As I indicated, the preparation of this particular regulation was based on taking into account flexibilities that would exist based on existing infrastructure, so that no province was placed at a disadvantage over another and so that they could find those innovative solutions within their infrastructure to achieve the outcome that we were all looking for, in terms of managing the removal of the risk materials from animal feed.
So will there be a common look and feel in every province across the country in what's being done? Obviously not. There will be new technologies that may be appropriate and more easily adaptable in certain jurisdictions than in others. Some will opt for composting and reduction. Others will opt for doing other things within their programming, based both on the infrastructure of the industry itself and on the provincial infrastructures that manage the environmental side of it.
At the end of the day, I expect what we will see, in all fairness, honourable member, is that as some of these innovative solutions come to play, they will be seen as best practices. So if everybody is open to them, we will probably see a greater alignment over time. But again, the program was never designed to be prescriptive, so that everybody had to do the exact same thing. What it did provide was if everybody took appropriate measures, we would come to the same outcome, which was absolutely imperative.