I would disagree with your characterization that only multinationals and transnationals will take advantage of this. We have changed the game plan in Canada so that wheat and barley commissions across western Canada and throughout Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritimes now have the ability, with a check-off, to direct their own investments in research. I think that's a good thing to have.
We've also made significant investments in the organic sector so that they can start to develop their own varieties as well.
When it comes to this whole idea that there are wind-blown seeds and seeds spread by birds, this goes back to the Percy Schmeiser case. It was pretty hard for Mr. Schmeiser—and that's why he lost—to justify that 1,200 acres of canola were wind-blown or spread by birds. It just doesn't happen in that manner. Certainly there may be a rogue plant that shows up from time to time, but that is not a patent infringement, and no one has ever taken a farmer to court for a scattering of seeds throughout a 160-acre or a 300-acre field.