On the first question about our position relative to Australia or the U.S., I don't think any exporting country would say they have the perfect transportation system. But one thing I do want to point out is the proximity to market. We have some of the longest shipping distances. If someone is importing pulses into India, the number of days to get cargo from Australia to India is far shorter than from Canada to India. We want to look at the whole period, from the time an order is placed until it arrives in port. That's where some of our competitors.... If we look at peas out of the Black Sea, you have a lot shorter shipping time to India than we do. We're geographically where we are in the world, and our markets are where they are, which is one of the challenges.
The U.S. also has transportation challenges. When it makes economic sense, I think Canadian companies ship through U.S. ports. There have been discussions on this. In fact, at transportation seminars we regularly have people coming up from U.S. rail lines and ports. But they also have a very large tonnage of product that's exported out of U.S. ports.
I think our focus needs to be on how to make the Canadian system work well. We have a good system, but it's just underperforming.