The first thing I'd like to address is hunger. Hunger is multi-faceted, and part of it is that we will need to essentially double production in the next 50 years. I agree with that, and there are many tools.... But most hunger is an infrastructure issue, man's inhumanity to man. There are distribution of wealth issues in many cases. It's not productivity issues, per se.
To my knowledge, most of the multinationals.... I'll speak specifically for our company: we provided free of charge to Africa Harvest, one of the major FAO NGOs in Africa, all the information and the genetics for drug tolerance, for example, that subsistence farmers could use in sorghum and many other crops. I would emphasize that this is a Canadian company—$50 million of Canadian investors; essentially 95% of the investors have been Canadian. That was all given free of charge to Africa Harvest and to what we call the CIMIT labs across the world. The FAO has research labs for cassava, potatoes, etc., around the world, and the companies have provided these technologies free of charge to FAO agencies to use in production of seed for subsistence farmers.