We compete right now. Canola is a competitive crop. Canola is providing tremendous returns to Canadian farmers. We compete with soy and palm--that's true--and there are some issues in terms of soy in the U.S. and the amount of support and subsidies that soy receives. But canola is a different crop, and because it's 40% oil, we have a different competitive advantage. What's critical for us is that on the world stage, in terms of tariffs, we're not penalized compared to soy. So, for example, when China buys canola, there's a 9% tariff on canola. There's only a 3% tariff on soy, so that works out to $24 a tonne that we're being penalized. Those are the types of things we need in terms of being able to compete.
On March 31st, 2009. See this statement in context.