We've been working really hard on the traceability file for a few years now. We have it to the point now where we have most of the premises across Canada identified. We have computer systems in place to actually track animals. We're still having some issues with confidentiality and other issues that kind of defy logic from a producer point of view. If you're going to actually identify something, you should have the freedom to actually use that information in a worthwhile way, so we still have a few things to deal with.
We're not doing individual animal ID, as they would in the cattle and sheep industry. We're dealing with pens of pigs and loads of pigs. The advantage we have is that our animals don't go out to pasture and move from place to place throughout their lives. They're usually quite confined to where they're produced.
We're seeing progress, but we're still seeing challenges. We think there is a benefit, but as Mr. Toews outlined, it has to be workable and it has to be done in an economical way, because our producers do not want regulation for the sake of regulation. It has to produce something positive.