Thank you for the question. There are a lot of issues there. We could probably spend a lot of time discussing them.
But very briefly, in terms of biofuels and producer participation, I think it's clear that the whole biofuels and bio-products area offers tremendous opportunities for producers. We're seeing that play out already.
The government announced a couple of programs to assist producers to participate in this. The Biofuels Opportunities for Producers Initiative was a $20-million program to help farmers develop business plans and feasibility studies to look at participation. Then, the ecoABC program, or ecoAgriculture Biofuels Capital program, is a $200-million program to provide matching funding for producer participation in the development of biofuel facilities.
So there are programs in place to help producers participate not just in the growing of feed stock but in processing it into fuels. This is part of the overall biofuels strategy that has been announced. There are other components, but I won't go into those now, in the interests of time.
As to bio-products, I'm going to pass that to Dr. Fortin in a moment.
On the whole issue of food security, in the consultations on Growing Forward we heard a lot of interest in growing the domestic market and in recognizing it. We export about 43% of what we produce, depending on how you count it. So for large parts of the sector, the export market and the global market are critically important for their success. But there are opportunities in Canada, and that came out in the consultations.
We developed, under the APF, a Brand Canada initiative, which is to understand our global customers—what they like about Canada, what they see as important—and to demonstrate to them that we're close to the top, if not the top, in those areas of food safety, quality, environmentally responsible production, and so on.
A lot of those messages resonate in the domestic market, and there are opportunities, as people pointed out in the consultations, to take a greater share of that domestic market for our producers. In that context, it can be consistent with our trade obligations. Where it's not consistent is where we put up barriers that are not allowed under the various agreements we're party to.
Concerning bio-products, perhaps Dr. Fortin would like to comment about the future.