I'll start. Definitely the innovations that we need to become competitive again in western Canada with the feed grains we use.... In barley, for instance, there has been very little progress in yield and other attributes of the crop compared to corn, canola, and soybeans, all of which have had a lot of private research gone into them. They have literally doubled their yields in the last 20 years, whereas our feed grains have flat-lined.
It is partly because the model that we depend on, entirely public research, hasn't enticed any investment from the private sector. We're seeing this as an option that could lead to more investment in research so that we could catch up and become competitive and get more acres in high-producing feed grains.