I don't know where the concept of three months is coming from, to be very truthful with you. It usually costs somewhere between $10 million and $20 million at least, per variety, to register a transgenic crop, so it's a huge number of studies. Transgenic crops are the most studied new varieties ever in the history of mankind. They've now been grown on 1.5 billion acres of land worldwide, and there's not been a serious problem reported anywhere, either environmentally or health-wise--or perhaps some minor problems. So they are incredibly well tested.
The crops that we are developing are different from some of the crops that you've been looking at. We're actually altering the plant's own genes, so we're not changing...we're not putting in protein from outside. We're actually modifying the plant's own genes and altering the way the plant grows. We're taking what would be done by normal breeding, which is looking for different...which is a genetic change in the plant. Now, once we find in one plant how to change it so we can produce it so that it's more drought tolerant, we can go to other crops and say that if we do the same thing there, we can produce them to make them drought tolerant as well. This is really quite a different phase of plant biotechnology that's coming in now to allow us to develop these new crops.