Thank you. I can start.
It's important to understand that for traditional varieties—and I'll use plant varieties because we only have the one animal—we don't carry out for a new plant variety all of the safety assessment steps that we take here. This is in addition to and on top of what would normally happen for a new variety to come into the marketplace in Canada.
New plant varieties are considered by recommending committees. Then the final stage CFIA undertakes, which is the variety registration, is acting on the advice of those recommending committees. They take into account the plant variety parameters for that particular variety. If it's canola, then they look at seed shattering and all of those parameters that meet the criteria for the variety. If it meets that, the recommending committee will recommend the registration of that new variety.
The plant breeding steps of that traditional crop also take a number of years to go through the back-crosses that are necessary in traditional plant breeding, and then there's the field trialling in order to generate the data for the recommending committees. That, too, is a lengthy process. GM crop has, on top of that, the safety assessments that we described, which aren't a requirement for the traditional crop.