Because the phrase is being used multiple times with its own self-contradiction, the phrase being that the price of fertilizer is a function of demand, I want to quickly comment that the facts belie this. For example, at least from the Canadian situation, in terms of the idea that it's being sold for less in the United States than in Canada, there's no more or less demand around the world and in the United States than there is in Canada.
Secondly, farmers in North America can directly speak to how there's something wrong with that statement, because we, as members know, commissioned a ship from Russia, filled it with fertilizer, did all the international negotiations and sourcing and all that, brought that ship across the ocean, put it into the port of Churchill, unloaded it, and delivered it to farmers' sidings for less money than what they're paying here in Canada.
Obviously, if we can incur all of those costs and still deliver to farmers for less money than what's available, something other than demand is at play.