Yes, if we can get some strategic arrangements built into the development. If we're not so paranoid with countervail and being able to use the word “expansion”, that we don't run and scurry and get—We're so afraid of what's happening south of border.
One of the things we do in Newfoundland is we're on an APF advisory council, and it puts the producer at the table with the decision-making process. We were trying to make a decision one day on something that we're going to do for a vegetable farmer in Fortune Bay, Newfoundland. All of a sudden he was rejected, and the rationale was because we're afraid of countervail. How the hell does a farmer in Fortune Bay, Newfoundland, who's farming on 20 acres of vegetable property, get caught up in countervail? We've taken this too far.
Yes, we have to have strategic investment, and if we bring that in—But agriculture in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador is the only renewable commodity that has got any growth potential. Everything else, the forestry, the fishery, everything, is just at a standstill, the status quo. It's going backwards if we don't get investment in research and development.
For example, we talked about R and D. We have a blueberry industry, with the best blueberry in North America, the highest in antioxidants; it has everything. We produced half a million dollars' worth last year while there was $81 million from Nova Scotia. We started out 12 years ago on the same playing field. Where did we go wrong? It was because of investments.