We are very hopeful that there can be some investment in western Canada in processing.
There are three significantly sized processing facilities in eastern Canada. Two are in Ontario, and one is near Trois-Rivières, Quebec. That's really good. They are doing well. Their crush is up this year from previous years, and it's a value-added process. Instead of marketing the seed, you're marketing meal and oil, which have a higher value. It's part of this initiative around value added—more processing is good.
This is the story in western Canada. In Manitoba we have nearly 2 million acres of soybeans grown now. I think everybody in the industry looks at that and thinks that it's a pretty large amount and that it's the base for constructing a processing facility in western Canada, something we don't currently have. There is a natural market in the livestock industry there for the meal.
In terms of the need for investment, I think probably that type of investment is going to come from one of the large processing companies and not from public assistance. In terms of attracting foreign direct investment, there may be an opportunity there.