I don't think we're advocating that we get rid of the export model. The export model is very important. In New Brunswick, potatoes are a huge industry. Blueberries are an export product. But, especially for new farmers to get into farming, there is a huge amount of smaller production in terms of certain types of livestock, vegetables, fruits, and so on that we import right now. We import as much as we export, probably. There is a lot of this that can be replaced and give us greater food security and give young people an opportunity to get their foot in the door.
The export market is still important, but we can't sacrifice local protection for local consumption to the export market as well. I don't know if I'm making it clear, but we value export still.
If you look at a commodity like milk, for example, some people are going to say it's a commodity board that's protected, but it is one of the more prosperous parts of the Canadian agriculture industry. It brings stability. It brings a tremendous number of jobs, especially in rural Canada. A lot of, we'll say, part-time farmers or smaller farmers end up buying equipment from the larger milk producers and so on. It's the whole basis of rural Canada, really.
There's a place for a local market, I guess.