Thank you for the question, Mr. Miller.
One of the highlights I've personally seen with the environment chapter has been the fact that each province, working with their federal co-chairs, has really tweaked the environment chapter provincially or regionally to accommodate some of the unique characteristics of that area.
For example, every province in the country has established an EFP program, environmental farm plan program, that they felt best fit to meet the needs of their industry, often in partnership with those industry stakeholders. So I think that's been really successful—to see a national model and to follow a national goal, but to have it so that even at the provincial or regional level there's some flexibility to be able to develop programs that make sense for the industry that exists there.
The point I was trying to make is that I really see that model working effectively with the science and innovation component in the next generation, rather than trying to fit us all through the western Canada mindset of a value chain and where the industry is going. We have different needs here in Atlantic Canada. We have different opportunities. And I think certainly under our capacity-building needs, under science and innovation and the future growth of the industry with some new opportunities, a more regional approach would be much more highly favoured, and I think much more successful.