Yes. What I was talking about is that the individual producer will get the best of the old system evaluation, the system that the rest of Canada has been using, which is just a one-time evaluation system that in many cases, especially when there are declining commodity prices, has not given them the true value or the true effect--as is shown--of declining inventory evaluations.
So under the P1-P2, most farmers are going to benefit from that twice-a-year evaluation system that allows a more accurate evaluation of their current inventory. However, some farmers, depending on how their markets are and depending on the products they're dealing with, will benefit from the old system. Whichever system benefits them the most, they will receive that amount. So they will receive either the old system, if that's best for them, or we'll do the calculations, and if that's better for them, they'll get the P1-P2 evaluation system. Either way, they won't get a clawback on it; they'll get the best of either world.