Thanks, Randy, for putting me on the spot.
Certainly there was a huge impact on the Canadian canola growers, partly because the market was just emerging in China. Demand was starting to really ramp up in China, and with the 15-million-tonne Canola Council goal, this was the way we were going to achieve it.
In dollar terms, China would take something around the million-tonnes-a-year mark, and they were just starting to ramp that up to probably two million tonnes. So it was a significant blow to an industry that was probably producing at the time about 11 to 12 million tonnes. It would be 10% or 20% of the canola crop in Canada—as distinct from giving a dollar-per-tonne figure—as a percentage of the export market. There was a huge market.