Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to our witnesses for providing our committee with your testimony today.
Going back to what Mr. Steinley said earlier, with his obvious pride in the canola in his hometown, I can remember visiting Alberta last year, driving east of Calgary in August, and seeing those fields of canola. It's quite the sight.
Mr. Everson, maybe I'll start with you. I've read that canola is a superior biofuel feedstock because of its low saturated fat content, which allows it, as a biodiesel in particular, to operate at lower temperatures. In response to Mr. Drouin, you were talking about the development of new seed varieties and so on.
Can you go into a little bit more detail on that? Are you talking about specific seed varieties that will help as a specific stock that might be better as a stock for biofuel, with better yields and so on? If you could put that into the context of how that will help us with our processing capacity, I think that would be helpful for our committee.