Yes, there are lots of things. My honey producers were saying the same thing, and actually my grain producers are saying it now too.
The other thing talked about, Mr. Rourke, in relation to plant breeding and trying to double our yields or get more production, is that we're going to have to face the reality, going into 2020, 2030, 2040, 2050, that we have a population that's growing across the world and we're going to have to feed them.
A lot of resources are going into other areas to increase capacity or productivity. For example, you can go back to no tillage. In fact, Mr. Vandaele, you probably would remember the days before no tillage, and now no tillage has made a huge difference in production, and not only in that but in the environment and the efficiency of farming operations.
Do you think government should have a role in looking at other areas of efficiency gain in agriculture? Again there's a problem: you're saying it should be in the seed sector, but the seed sector is just one part of the puzzle. When you look at the farming operation, you have the combines, you have the seeding equipment, you have the agronomics, such as with fertilizer.... When does the government involvement start and stop?
How do you see this question?