I am not aware of what the position of our provincial and national associations is on it, but just yesterday I went to purchase a load of 46-0-0, which is nitrogen, and the price change from last year to this year is 35%, from $545 to $715 a tonne. That is a direct effect of the support that the ethanol community is receiving and the compounding effect of the ingredients' going to produce ethanol. Last year you had to order your corn supplies before you took last year's crop off, just so you could have corn to plant this year.
Energy will probably be one of our most expensive commodities. For our dairy herds, protein supplements should, in the long term, become cheaper, but because of the hype that's going on right now and the belief that those commodities are in short supply, distilled grains and the ethanol grains currently haven't dropped in price. My personal costs for grains have gone up $50 since September. My cost of production has gone up, and because of the way our cost of production formulas are set--they are usually a year in arrears--the dollar increase won't come until next year.