We're not in the development of products per se. We are a retailer of those products to our farm customers, so I guess we have a frontline view of how producers use those products. We offer agronomic services as well, to assist producers in the development of their crops.
The point you make is a very valid one though. If we deregister these products that are in wide use and are critical to farming practice as we currently know it, what then? The pests they're intended to control, whether they're insects or weeds, will grow and propagate themselves, so something will have to be done. There needs to be an analysis then of what product will be used and what the consequence will be of that new product or practice. It may mean further passes on a field with a less efficient product, thereby increasing carbon emissions. Are we in a better place then?