That's kind of a hard question, because there's so much restriction on the ability to sell seed—I used wheat as an example across Canada—it's hard to estimate what the impact might be. We represent the private sector, and I know that when a company develops a variety, they generally have a market in mind. But in a lot of cases now, if they're developing fusarium-resistant varieties, it could be something that would be beneficial to Atlantic Canada, or to Ontario and Quebec. If those recommending committees suggest that perhaps it's not good enough, or that they don't want to let it in for whatever their merit classifications are—they're all different—then they can't sell in those provinces, which means those farmers don't have access to them.
One of the ways it could be fixed, and I think it's a fairly easy fix, is that once the government proposal for changes to variety registration comes through, you could actually put some crop kinds into the new basic registration system, which wouldn't require the recommendation of a committee. That way the marketplace would determine whether or not those varieties were suitable for those areas. No farmer will buy a variety that they know is susceptible to fusarium or to anything else for that matter that would jeopardize their markets.