Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Production insurance, as you know, is a provincial jurisdiction. However, what we have been doing, and as we did find, when we create the frameworks and when we create capacity for learning from other jurisdictions, it's facilitated other provinces to take on....
For example, in terms of the livestock mortality insurance that is now being looked at both in Quebec and Nova Scotia, Quebec had done quite an extensive amount of homework on that. They shared all that data with the provinces and said that this way, you can move a lot quicker.
In addition, one thing I failed to mention is that as well as provincial production insurance, there's a private risk shared management insurance program whereby we work with the industry in terms of finding ways they can insure themselves.
As part of this initiative, the Livestock and Poultry Council in Ontario has developed a very extensive project for livestock production insurance that is private production insurance. This one is now ready for pilot. In Ontario, it's gone through all the phases. It was funded from the PSRMP and it's looking quite.... It's got fantastic possibilities.
We're bringing these types of good-news stories to the provinces. We get the data, the homework they did, whether it be through CFIA in terms of creating the capacity for the reinsurers, and we use that. They can take that and make it a lot simpler to deliver in their own province.
That was how Ontario was able to take over 45 commodities. They based it on the British Columbia acreage loss and the Quebec acreage loss. It would have taken them years to do this if they had to start from scratch. But by being able to use other jurisdictions' learnings, we were able to move it quite quickly.