Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you, witnesses. You need to be given a lot of credit. I think I heard that you've doubled your production in canola in 10 years. There will be a lot of things that will be a part of that success story, but when we get to the scientific evidence, it doesn't matter who's in government and it doesn't matter what country we're talking about, we always talk about requiring science and that it needs to be evidence-based, yet we get to the quandary where, I think, sometimes it's a science of convenience and interpretation.
I remember CETA discussions in Europe, at a time of GMOs. At that time, there absolutely was no science—as we all know, and as Francis has mentioned—against anything that was GMO or that it did not meet the safety of all those requirements. The comment was that it was public opinion that drove the governments to not accept that science and technology.
I want to just touch, then, on China and the blackleg. If I understood you right, the requirement was 1%. They've now altered the standard. I'm assuming that's an international standard, which would be 2.5% for not only Canada but other countries that ship in. Is that now established, whatever that number is? Maybe you could clarify that. Is that established now for the next shipments continuing on, or was that a one-time resolution?