Thank you.
Mr. Wells, when you were going through your presentation, I appreciated the commentary.
I'm from Ontario. One thing that has had a fair bit of discussion is the neonicotinoids and the pollinators. What we've also found is that over the past while there has been an increase in the bees and the beehive numbers and production. The interesting part is your mentioning that over the last number of years things have changed in agriculture in terms of the products we use, the application, and even the crops we grow in different regions, and that we are saying that there is insufficient testing prior to their introduction.
When you go back, one of the things Canada is recognized for—in fact, one of the concerns we have in Canada—is that we get behind the eight ball in the approval of inputs for our Canadian farmers. We often get behind what Europe is doing, but particularly we get behind our American friends, whom we're in direct competition with.
I'll also go back a number of years in the auto industry or the farm equipment industry. As evolution has happened, as research and technology have increased, we now have made an auto industry, for example, that has done an extraordinary job in its advancement against pollution. We look at the farm equipment industry, those who produce the combines and the tractors, but also those who produce within our greenhouse environments and within the—