In the context of the discussions that have taken place to date in the federal-provincial-territorial space, as I noted earlier, standards of identity and grades are critical. We are not far apart. There are some differences, but we're not far apart on issues of safety, because you're either safe or you're not.
You get nuance, but on standards of identity and on grades, you do have some marked differences. These then can be very problematic in terms of the movement of products, particularly if you have myriad standards for what you might call, in one jurisdiction, the same product. So these influence issues of labelling and issues of the presentation of the product.
Those are significant if a business, in order to sell in essence the same product in three different places, has to subtly reformulate it as a processed product for each of those jurisdictions. What are they going to do? If they're big enough, they might run three lines of the same product, but more likely they'll focus on just one market because it's not economically feasible to produce to three different standards for the same jam. Those are the kinds of issues that exist in our current system, which can be tackled and streamlined.
I raise those as examples because they impact industry in a very real way.