Yes. Certainly over the last decade, for example, we've worked really closely to align our regulatory and registration approval processes with, for example, the United States specifically, so that we could both have access to the best science on both sides of the border and help address some of these access issues that Canadian agriculture was pointing out to us.
We think we've come a really long way on the joint review alignment process, and as a result of that, farmers on both sides of the border have very close access to the same pesticides. It's not perfect, but it's very close. We've taken that exact same approach working closely with OECD countries in Europe, for example, such that Canada and the United States and a lot of our global partners actually have now a global joint review process that most of the major manufacturers are taking advantage of. They're putting these new pesticides into this global joint review process amongst many countries at the same time, so that all countries essentially get access to these new pesticides in a similar time frame.