Thank you.
One main opportunity right now for Canadian agriculture is the longer growing season, the soils that are warming earlier, and the opportunity that provides both to plant earlier and to plant different crops. That represents a great opportunity if our farming communities can adjust to it.
Then the cause for concern, of course, is that despite the best models, we still don't know exactly what's going to happen or when. People have great concern about whether they're going to be able to adapt rapidly enough. I think that's really a question of whether we're able to put measures in place that enable that kind of rapid adaptation. Over and over again we've seen farmers and farming communities doing a great job of adapting and picking up new technology, but every time that's done it requires a great input of capital, both for knowledge and for technology—for, say, tractors. We need to provide opportunities to allow farmers to do the sorts of innovations they think are necessary.