There used to be two systems whereby you could bring.... One was to get a full registration for a product in Canada, passing the science review, ensuring that a product was off patent, and coming in and competing in the marketplace on a regular basis.
When the registration process was put in place back in the eighties—it was called PSR-2—there was a clause put in such that if this did not create price discipline and there were excessive barriers in the Canadian marketplace, farmers had the right to own-use import when there were lower-cost products elsewhere. We did that successfully with Glyphosate product, and we had several others for which we had gone through the process.
There was a significant lobby to have that suspended and replaced with a group program, which is where it sits right now. Unfortunately, the group program is totally ineffective. It's fundamentally flawed and is not providing any value in price discipline whatsoever.
Under the other method, we are actively working with other generics from around the world to get their products registered in Canada so that we can create competition. As I said earlier, the bulk of the chemistries that are used on the farm today are off patent, and with Canada only being 3% of the global market, there is a reluctance, with all the hoops that have to be jumped through specifically in Canada, to put those generics in here.
We're different, of course, because our membership base is saying that they want us to bring access to those products here in Canada, and that's what we do.