We're building numbers. As I mentioned, we have $458 million in annual exports from Canada. That's our best analysis of the available data. The issue is that wheat is wheat is wheat in much of our tracking. WorldCat and other forms of tracking agriculture products don't disaggregate organic from them, so we've had to do our best to try to calculate that.
Canada was one of the first, if not the first, to break out organic products at the HS code level. We currently track about 60 organic commodities coming into the country; however, we don't track any going out of the country. After the U.S. and Europe struck their arrangement, the U.S. started tracking some of their exports so they could better manage and monitor the impact of the trade arrangement they have.
I know the CETA document talks about classification and about better tracking of trade. We would certainly support that. We think it's really valuable to show Canadians the impact of these trade agreements directly on the agricultural sector.
For our own purposes, we organize a variety of programs. I was at a producer conference last week on the east coast talking about opportunities. We go to major conferences in the west. We bring producers, brokers and traders with us to foreign missions and trade shows and introduce them to potential buyers. We do everything we can to get them into a good relationship and build that Canadian export dollar.