It's a very good point, because with the launch of the new clusters led by the Western Grains Research Foundation, we managed this time to have the entire country under one umbrella. Before we had the group in Ontario, and in Quebec
the Fédération des producteurs de cultures commerciales du Québec.
They were kind of separate and they had kind of a mini wheat focus on that. With the Growing Forward 2, with the clusters in wheat, we managed to have all of this under one umbrella.
The point is that they are now able to mobilize all that capacity and infrastructure that we have in western Canada with the University of Saskatchewan and put that together with the University of Guelph and people in the province of Quebec as well, at CÉROM. They basically have something that is more comprehensive. Leveraging all that research in western Canada, and with the research in eastern Canada...because it's all wheat.
At the end, we have to change some specificity—one is winter, the other one is spring—so that you have it...but I think you could exchange that more freely. I think the leveraging of that is probably the biggest accomplishment, and that's very useful and very precious for the people in Ontario.