Our trade partners do an extremely good job, and the market access secretariat at Agriculture Canada too. Our industry went to South Korea and Japan recently. In South Korea, we're trying to harvest the benefit of a free trade agreement with that country, and the trade commissioner set up our program in South Korea and did a great job. We saw all the key people we needed to see in that country over a period of two and a half days. In Japan also, we put a heavy burden on those people, and they delivered really well. The cattleman may have a comment on that, too.
I think Agriculture Canada and CFIA do a really good job. I've been in situations where we've had to have the science part of the equation with us, the people who sign off on phytosanitary certificates, to guarantee to the import market that our product is free of pests on their pest control list and so on. Only scientists can do that and help us innovate in regulation, and that's an important part of accessing markets too.
So, the answer is that we can always use more improvements; we have a lot of market access challenges. All of us, I think, in the agriculture sector face these barriers that come up on a whole range of different issues, so resources are always important from that point of view. But by and large, I think we're very well served by our public service.