Yes, I think that would be quite possible. As for the animal health work that has been done, we're quite pleased with where dairy is heading. There were a lot of comments made about this in the questions around the table. One thing I want to raise, though, is that from one commodity to the next...if it's avian flu, you have to isolate it, and you have to deal with it.
I'll tell you that in livestock, in bovine, if you ever have an outbreak of foot and mouth disease, there's nobody who can compensate. Two hypothetical systems have been run to show what it would do in North America. Cattle move around. I keep dairy cows on my farm for more than three months. They're there for eight or nine years quite often.
That shows why we need those kinds of things. We need them fast, and we need to be able to deal with those issues accurately, because they could wipe out half of the dairy production in Canada, especially just when you look at how cattle move around at auctions and so on.
We're quite pleased with the way it's moving. It should be concluded, and we should have a very clear program on what to expect in the case of a crisis.