Just before we recess, I want to send the Canadian Fertilizer Institute home with some homework, if that's all right, Mr. Larson and Mr. Graham.
We talked about Canadian competition and Canadian manufacturing. Could you give us a list of who all those players are? It's not in the deck that you presented. What percentage of that fertilizer that's being produced, or the different fertilizer commodities, is being consumed domestically, and what percentage are we exporting? I'd like to get a picture of that.
I have just a comment for the Canadian agri-retailers. All witnesses talked about forward pricing, the ability for farmers to buy around the year. One of the complaints I got this past fall--and I'm a farmer--was that our local retailers couldn't forward price. Farmers were going in to buy nitrogen in the fall, and they couldn't get a price. They were trying to close up their books for the year-end, and they couldn't actually get in there and get a price and get product committed for the spring planting. It kind of flies in the face of being able to buy year-round when--and hopefully this isn't going to happen regularly--some of the manufacturers won't even supply agricultural retailers with pricing so that they can price it back to the farmer.
Mr. Haney.