One of the good indicators.... We had a NAFTA technical working group that met with stakeholders in Charleston last December. I actually had a number of American companies approach me and say, for the first time, that they were interested in bringing products to Canada. There had been such discussion about joint reviews and the comparability of our two systems before, but they saw the Canadian regulatory regime as an unknown and as a small market, and they simply weren't interested in coming. The fact that they're now saying they're interested is good, and Richard has been down there and has met with some of them, and we'll continue to encounter them at the NAFTA forums.
With our Canadian registrants, the challenge is pretty obvious. Minor use is an issue everywhere around the world. It still is an issue in the big markets, like the United States and the European Community, so when you are such a small market compared to the United States, minor use is a huge challenge.
Again, we're just at a good spot now where we can say that the new chemicals are better and that we want the farmers to be able to access those new chemicals because they're better for them, they're better for health, and they're better for the environment.
So as regulators, we see great advantage to us and our stakeholders in working to increase harmonization and international regulatory cooperation right now.