Sure, I can start, and I'm sure Ian can finish with anything I may have missed.
You're right. If China, which is the most important market for canola, doesn't approve a trade, that means a Canadian farmer can't grow and does not get the benefit from those technologies. When I tell people that story, they find that fairly shocking, but that would be true of any number of markets. It speaks to why, when Canada is negotiating international trade agreements, the issue of non-tariff trade barriers is incredibly vital to agriculture. You will generally find around the world that, as tariffs fall, non-tariff trade barriers tend to rise.
I'm not saying anything that governments both previous and current don't understand very well, and the negotiating teams understand those, but we have to continue to make the point, because it does affect the competitiveness of Canadian farmers.