We certainly do.
There are a couple of points I'd like to make. I think the committee is aware that the costs of registering pesticides in Canada are very high. There are additional costs to registering pesticides in Canada and Canadian-specific studies that our members have to commission and provide for the Pest Management Regulatory Agency before getting Canadian approval, so our cost of entry into the market is higher in Canada, and it is a smaller market.
What we've tried to do about that is a couple of things. Our members have been working very hard to look at getting a NAFTA-wide approval and having a NAFTA label so that products are available in Canada and the U.S. simultaneously. That helps to rebalance availability for farmers on both sides of the border.
As I mentioned earlier, we've also worked hard to get a faster and improved generic approval system here in Canada, which will help as well to improve price competition. We've supported a minor-use program, and while this isn't price specific, we've certainly helped to support a minor-use program through Agriculture Canada to bring in low-volume products that are not terribly economical to register in Canada. Through that program there is an opportunity to build the data set that is required to get the programs registered.
Those are some of the things we've tried to do to bring a competitive array of products to Canada.