Yes, this has been a problem since GM canola came on board years ago and basically, in one season, decimated the organic canola industry, which was our strongest growth industry in organics at the time. It dried up our European market.
So we had that wave of canola and, as I mentioned earlier, Triffid flax, which was actually pulled from the market. It was the Flax Council that actually asked to have the seed deregulated, because they didn't want their export markets drying up. So we had that situation again, in which prairie and Ontario farmers lost organic flax markets, and those markets have not come back.
What we find is that the seed sellers are able.... It's two to three years before they can rebuild a market after an event, but those farmers who are producing for those seed dealers aren't necessarily staying in the game. They're going to other crops or, in some cases that we know of, have lost farms or have had to go back to conventional methods, despite wanting to be participating in an organic paradigm, simply because they had no way of selling what it was they knew how to grow.
There is an economic impact when drift happens.