Absolutely. I think the environmental farm plan, if properly adapted as we move forward, can satisfy a lot of the demands that Canadian farmers are getting put on them from a sustainable sourcing perspective. I think it can also be made into a more effective extension tool to help extend management techniques on areas that aren't in production. I see that as a weakness in the current environmental farm plan, because it's good for identifying issues on fertilizer storage and tillage operations and that sort of thing but maybe less so on management of non-productive acres.
I think the subliminal message in that is that those are of no value. If properly constructed, I think it could help demonstrate the values of those areas from a carbon capture perspective and from a water quality perspective, and also from the perspective of, as Mark was talking about, maintenance of pollinators and other beneficial insects.