It's important to put this proposed policy into perspective. I think you've grasped that two different thresholds are being proposed. There is this action level which is supposed to take into account dust and pieces of grain or maybe individual grains that are getting commingled. These are very low levels. To reiterate, this is about product coming into Canada that's already been approved by another country in a way that Canadian officials are comfortable with. It's to try to prevent huge shipments, these massive ships with tens of thousands of tonnes of grain coming in, being rejected just because of a dust particle and that kind of stuff. That's what that 0.1% or 0.2% action level is designed to cover.
There's another threshold which is the crop-specific threshold. I'm not speaking on behalf of the grain industry. I'm speaking on behalf of the trade developers. I understand that the grain industry is looking at numbers around 2%, 3%, or maybe 5%. It just depends on the crop. In those situations the government regulators will need to do a so-called low-level presence type risk assessment to ensure there's no risk to Canada if shipments were to come in with the levels I've just mentioned.