The Liberals should get twice as much anyways because we have better questions.
Mr. Chair, thank you.
Thank you, guests, for coming here.
Doctor, I'll go back to you. When you look at the opportunity Canada has to produce food for the world with climate change and with consumers in Asia especially liking our products and with an increasing population there, I think you mentioned your growing future. How do we capitalize on that? Others, whether Brazil or Argentina or Australia, are going to be competing with us, and I'm sure they're investing in their industries also.
I'm very interested in what you said about looking at this ten-year strategy, looking way ahead of the curve and investing in projects that will position us to be one of the leading suppliers of food for around the world, and also in Canada.
Can you expand a little bit on that? I don't know if you can talk about some of the projects you'd like to see, if you're looking through a ten-year lens, or about how you would structure those with partnerships for the ten years. If, say, we were embarking on certain crops, projecting for climate change, and for consumers, where would we want to be in ten years to be number one in the world?