Sure. If you look at Mr. Wiebe and the prosperity that I think his family farm has—and farms have across Canada—you'll see that a big part of that prosperity comes from fertilizer use.
I think we tend to think a lot about these problems in terms of food supply and scarcity, but in a place like Africa where they're getting yields that are a fraction of what we can grow in western Canada, with the same amount of rainfall in many areas, we're simply not utilizing the farms in those areas the way we should. A big part of the problem is that they're not using fertilizer.
If places like Africa are going to develop economically, the smallholder farmers who have farms of an acre or two acres are going to have to have the means of production to grow a surplus so that they can have a decent income, they can send their kids to school, they can have health care, and they can contribute to their society. Prosperous societies around the world have prosperous agriculture. The two things go hand in hand. Pesticides and seeds are important, but fertilizer is the critical element in allowing that kind of prosperity to develop.