I would add that I think it is a little about resources, as I indicated in the presentation, especially around science and technical issues.
The other thing I would stress is that Canada can really help in a leadership role, by ensuring that our major science-based international organizations are well funded and working better than they are. We need to have international protocols for dealing with some of these SPS issues—the International Plant Protection Convention, the WTO, the Codex. In the case of maximum residue levels—residues on grains going from one country to another—what's happening at the moment is that countries can impose import limits on those residues, so it's an important element. Rather than having one country have this system and another country that system and a proliferation of different maximum residue levels in every country, we need to bring the scientists together. These products are no different. The science in one country is no different from the science in another country. Why don't we have a single, effective international organization that sets an MRL that all import countries can get behind? That would be huge for us.