Thanks.
I'll start off by disagreeing with Jurgen right off the bat. Our biggest problem with supply management is within Canada.
I've been at the negotiations. I don't hear supply management talked about by other countries. I've only heard the argument you just made, Jurgen, from the Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance and others using it as an excuse for our not being successful at the WTO. I don't hear those arguments from New Zealand, Australia, or the United States. I don't hear them.
We have got to learn to take a united stand. When we go to Europe or to Geneva—and I've been there—and get people in a room, it's Canadians who are making the arguments with their enemies in the other countries in terms of trade, saying that supply management is our problem and that we've got to get that off the table so that we can get to free trade. That's one of our biggest problems. I say that respectfully.
Mr. Landals, you said we haven't had a strategic plan in place. That's true; we haven't. I think if you look at us compared with the Americans, it's really true, especially as we're getting into the ethanol and biodiesel areas in this country. They have a strategic plan. They're looking at ethanol and biodiesel from a national security point of view, from a national food strategy point of view, and from an assistance to the primary production industry point of view. We don't tend to do that.
There are opportunities; I agree with Jurgen on this point. As a country we're looking at ethanol and biodiesel at the moment as if that's our answer, whereas we should be looking at wind energy, we should be looking at small hydro energy, we should be looking at the biogas you can produce from manure biomass and everything else, and the pine beetle waste in terms of forestry, but we don't seem to do it from a national strategic point of view as a country as a whole.
The example I'll use, which is a bad one, is that in the removal of specified risk materials from animals, the federal government set aside $80 million two years ago to come up with a solution for how we could get rid of this material—maybe use it for energy and other means, and make it an economic generator. Our deadline is July 12. This committee finds out 17 months later that the feds and the provinces hadn't even come to an agreement on the allocation of money. That's 17 months after the $80 million was set aside. I think part of it is jurisdictional.
Folks, how do we somehow move in terms of safety nets to getting a national strategy that looks to the long-term vision? Where are we going to be 20 years down the road in this industry when we've got the complexities of the provinces, the mixture of farm organizations, and the feds working at it—and, coming to Bill's point, how do we ensure that there's some farm ownership and control in terms of that development?