Sure, I'll start. Actually, in the call for competition for research that we're going to be announcing, one of the major tenets will be food security and food safety. Food security is different from food safety in this definition. Food safety is making sure that your hamburger doesn't have E. coli in it. Food security is making sure everybody has a good hamburger. With regard to climate change and its effect, that is certainly another one of the tenets and pillars of the competition. Again we're talking about projects that will last for five years. We will need to continue investing in this as we go along.
I have another anecdote. Driving through the Red River Valley in Manitoba 10 years ago, you would have seen flax, canola, and wheat. When you drive through that country now, you're seeing soybean and corn. I think the companies that Stephen and CropLife deal with would probably like to see more corn and soybean in Canada as well. They know the genetics of these organisms very well. Trying to get them to grow with lower heat units, in shorter photoperiods is within the realm of possibility for them to do. Climate change, in some ways, could have a very positive effect on Canadian agriculture.