Our experience, for instance, with canola, is that we need pollinators. We would do nothing to take a chance on killing bees. We need bees to pollinate the crop. There's a symbiotic relationship there that we're well aware of and when you look at say, canola, there are millions and millions of acres where canola is coinciding and in harmony with beekeepers. We use neonics on the seed because we have to.
We don't see the problem and we don't see the linkage. Maybe in certain circumstances there are some linkages, but that's not to say there aren't other things like mites or disease or weather or beekeeper skills. There are a whole bunch of other factors that come into bee colony collapse. It's not just about neonics and we haven't drawn a really clear scientific link that we're comfortable with yet.
I think there are some gaps in the science around that, some gaps in the credibility. Again, I don't have anything specific, because I'm not a bug specialist or a neonics specialist, or a scientist for that matter, so I have to trust the scientists when they speak. I look to our Canadian regulators and our Canadian scientists for credible science here for Canada.