Yes, that's a huge area. I'll maybe focus in on one area, again where I think the federal government can be playing a lead role in this.
We actually have the Canada Grains Council semi-annual meeting on right now, just down the street. Following that, Thursday afternoon and Friday, we have the grain industry round table. And a low-level presence policy and Canada's position, both domestically and then also taking a leadership position on the international market, is key to this.
The solution has to be that we can play a leadership role in defining reasonable and tolerable levels for all of these products. I'm going to speak specifically about low-level presence policy. It simply is not possible to guarantee zero. We have to find...respecting human safety and environmental safety in all of our priorities. As someone in the food industry, I can say it is at the top of the list. But we have to recognize that from a government regulation perspective, most of our market access problems are not related to health or safety; they're regulatory gaps, where one regulatory body, we'll say the European Union, has not moved through regulatory approvals of a product that might have already received approval in Canada or the United States.
Because we can't ensure that there is never cross-contamination, what we have to do is work very hard to make sure that the regulations are up to date—