I have two points in response.
Under NAFTA, we've been encouraging our grower groups to identify priorities to deal with border irritants. Our growers are working on that kind of thing. What are the pesticides that are causing the most consternation for them at the border?
How they do it is up to them. If they want to do it based on cost differential, or on a flood of American products coming in, they can do that.
Second, the only thing we could possibly have any impact on is, obviously, pesticide prices. What we've tried to do there is harmonize our requirements to the extent possible with the United States' requirements. We are at the point where they can literally send the same submission—and they do—for joint reviews. The exact same package that goes to the United States comes to us. We receive it all electronically. There's so much data. It's not quite in the flash of an eye, but it's consumed in say ten minutes rather than a few weeks, as with the old paper format. We've worked to decrease the costs that are Canadian-specific.