Science and technology is a new pillar of ours. We're in our third year, and to have relevant programming with young people and bring it back into agriculture was very intentional. We have a direct track to the Canada-wide science fair, and there is a strong partnership there now to bring young people coming from agriculture and traditional agricultural settings into the science and technology conversation.
For example, this afternoon we have a young person on the Hill who is a national recipient in the Prime Minister's science fair. She's from P.E.I., and she was frustrated by seeing the amount of lobster shell wasted. She has developed a more advanced way of extracting polymers from lobster shells. We see every single day through a lot of our programming, and specifically through our science and technology programming, that young people are strongly coming out and wanting to be engaged in these areas, in particular precision farming.
For our part, my response would be that we need to make sure young people are engaging and participating and having the influence to be at the table in those conversations in order to challenge some of the mindsets.