I would say we're well aware of that, and we do stay in touch with groups. For example, the consulting engineers have raised some of these concerns with us as well, such as what happens if you're a small municipality—let's say my home town of Tisdale—and you put out a tender for a water plant and you get 12 European firms that bid on it, which may or may not have the capacity to understand what the weather and climatic conditions are for winters in western Canada as compared to winters in Europe? Those are the sorts of things we've talked about.
I'd have to say that as grain growers, we don't have that capacity internally in terms of staff and resources to do all of that. We have worked through the Canada-European round table, through which a lot of businesses in Canada come together. We work through groups like that and listen to what they have to say.
At the end of the day, our members, whether grain producers or beef and pork producers—because where they gain, we gain, because we supply the feed grains to them—are saying to work on this deal, but we are aware and we try to stay on top of what the other issues are. We don't have the capacity to truly analyze it.