I guess the short-term impact is that with the 10 million tonnes that are in the system already, there are existing customers out there. We do have other customers, Canadian domestic, U.S., Japan.
China is not in, and that's about a four and a half million tonne seed concern. Theoretically, if we go forward without China, we can expect to have four and a half million tonnes of seed that we don't have a home for. That will end up sticking to farmers' bins. It will end up in a carry-out at the end of this year.
It will cause prices to depress, as well as an abnormally high carry-out at the end of the year. Couple that with the production number coming in off of 22 million to 23 million acres, and we're probably in for maybe another 20 million to 21 million tonne crop on top of this, as well.
However, the real issue is that without China, we don't necessarily have a home for that four and a half million or 4.8 million tonnes of seed.