Mr. Graham, I know all about supply and demand and what have you, and as I said, we had witnesses who basically admitted that there was certainly some extra price-taking in the industry. I know that, because while the grains industry was having a couple of good years, as you mentioned, the livestock industry certainly was not, and there was a significant extra cost burden to them. My riding is the second largest producer of beef in the country. Of course there's a lot of pasture and hay, and I know many of my farmers, a large percentage, just basically cut back or didn't put any fertilizer on in that time. That is not sustainable. You know that can't continue.
But you just talked about opening a new mine and the time it takes, and that leads me to another question. There was some pretty clear evidence pointed out--it was in print--that fertilizer companies, certainly here in Canada and maybe in other places around the world, were basically scaling back production in order to keep those elevated prices. So what was the scale-back in production? Was it 10%, 20%? Do you have a number for that?