For tree fruits, for apples, dumping is a problem, internationally and domestically, in that on the west coast of Canada they have a problem with Washington State. In the east coast I perceive that there will be a problem coming if New York State is successful in getting a $20-million-a-year replant program that is going into head-to-head competition with what's going on in Nova Scotia right now.
Furthermore, if you want to go to the international marketplace, you would think that in countries such as the United Arab Emirates, you'd be able to export apples to that country and you'd be able to bring home some kind of a profit. Well, that doesn't appear to be the case, because Washington State--and I qualify my statement when I say “dumping”--is providing Dubai with apples that are certainly substandard from what they would put into the Canadian market. They are dumping apples into that market. They have trained the public to receive those apples and to pay a lesser price for them. So exporting to a country that you would think you'd be able to get a profit out of is impossible.