Sure, I'll leave it to my colleagues in the Horticultural Council to talk about maximum residue limits, because that's not one that we deal with on the seed side, but we definitely do deal with foreign markets where decisions do not seem to be made on the best possible science.
We have a strong working relationship with the European Seed Association, as well as the International Seed Federation. I think from our members' perspective, as well as those companies, especially the multinationals that operate in all the jurisdictions, when it comes to the import or export of biotech products into the EU, it still happens. It still happens for feed, it still happens for things, but it doesn't happen for sowing. We hear from a lot of our members that a lot of our companies have given up trying to get approval so they can actually export seed to the EU, so the EU farmers, who do often want it, can actually plant and grow that crop.
Right now, the only access they have to biotech products is for feed for animals or just the straight importing of products. We do talk to them quite a bit, but as you said, the European approval process is not great; but it's when it actually gets past that process to the EU member states that everything gets into a logjam.