That's a million-dollar question. It's a lot of what we've talked about here—the regulatory environment, the ease of getting some of these innovations to market—but it's broader than that, and I'm not going to pretend that this will solve all the issues. There is taxation and how you treat the corporations. There are environmental regulations. There is transportation, the rail. There are a lot of factors that affect our ability to get there. I think that's why some of the wording in the Barton report said that we need to fix some of the low-hanging fruit and work on the tougher ones as we move along.
From our perspective—and I'll focus on getting Canada from fifth to second on exports—we know that we can produce more food sustainably on the same land. I've brought the statistics for almost every crop in Canada. We have easily doubled or tripled yields in many of the crops, using the exact same input on that land. Our industry is able to innovate and get us there. We just need to make sure that an environment is established that will help us do that.
With all of the changes that are happening right now, and some of our competitors that are making bold statements about where they want to be in this hierarchy, we need to also have those bold statements from Canada. We need the accompanying encouragement at the regulatory level, for example, to be part of that as opposed to being on the sidelines, just regulating on health and environment and letting the rest of the elected officials and certain departments focus on increasing our position from fifth to second.