That's for me, I think. Thank you for the question.
Let me clarify one small piece that's important. The total compensation that would be on the table, if the $5 million were accepted, would be about $600,000, plus or minus a bit, per producer. The $5 million has not been agreed to. It's the source of fairly significant discussions between the industry and ourselves.
The methodology you referred to that we are using, if I can lay the foundation for my answer, is this. We have several programs at the outset that work together. We try to look at gaps in support when we're applying AgriRecovery so that we're not compensating twice for the same thing. With the Quebec government, we use a model that it has put together about what a model corn farm would look like—because we had to choose a target.
By way of example, how would you get from here to there over, say, a three-year period? We looked at such issues as carrying costs and new investment; land rental, if you had to expand your arable land in order to produce the same income, because the yield per acre is lower on corn than potato; advisory services and consultant assistance that would be required to make that transition. And we came up with the $5 million number overall for the 21 farms.