Perhaps I can begin with that. When we introduced the agricultural policy framework, we introduced comprehensive environmental programming related to environmental farm planning and the introduction of beneficial management practices. What we saw, particularly in the latter years of the APF, was a lot of take-up on environmental farm programming. Up to about 70,000 producers participated in that, and a significant subset of them participated in beneficial management practices. As we've consulted on the Growing Forward framework, that has been a key part of it.
A key aspect is how to measure the effects of that. We learned the lesson in the APF that you really have to be perhaps a bit more sophisticated in how you do that, rather than try to measure broad trends, which are very difficult to attribute. You have to link the particular actions taken by producers and the investments made by producers on farm to changes. What we're trying to focus on is particularly water. I think what we'll see in Growing Forward is in line with the provincial flexibility: more targeted actions, for example, dealing with issues such as the Lake Winnipeg watershed and the effects of agriculture production on that.
What we will try to do, and we will be doing that over the next few months in terms of developing performance indicators, is to make sure we are adequately targeting the effects of those, adequately measuring those.