Absolutely. There are chemicals out there that will kill the wireworm parent, the click beetle, on contact, but you are looking at insecticides being sprayed a lot more than they are now, significantly more.
The way we're managing it right now is an in-furrow process. It's safe. We are trained professionals in this field. It's regulatory that you do have to be certified and your employees have to be certified. We have legislative buffer zones. We abide by crop rotation acts. We abide by sensitive area acts and so on and so forth.
The problem I see with PMRA's decision-making process—I'm not 100% aware, but I know a bit about it—is that they'll look at it as a global spectrum. They have to start zeroing in on the actual locations where these pesticides are used and used the most, because there are reasons behind that. It may not have anything to do with what's going on in Saskatchewan, but it matters a lot in P.E.I., or vice versa.
Until there are other alternatives, I can't see how they can take that away from us.