We think it's very significant. It's a step forward that the European Community has basically said they have to provide some tolerance level for a low-level presence in feed for industrial use. The fact that the European Community and the member states came together and managed to come up with a qualified majority in support of an issue around genetically modified products was quite significant in its own right. I think what's happening there is the feed industry is understanding that they will not have access to feed supplies unless there is something other than a zero tolerance system in place that still maintains health and safety, with no compromising of principles.
The technical solution, as it's called, requires that this product already be approved by a scientific authority in some other place in the world. They have a safety assessment done on that product already, so they can protect health and safety, and at the same time they can provide access. I think it is a growing issue for countries reliant on imports around the world that they are able to have access.
The issue in a zero tolerance world will be one of food and feed security for countries that really depend on imports and won't be able to get them because they're detecting GM products that really have no impact from a health and safety point of view.