It's a regulatory issue that would be helpful for the whole industry, the whole value chain. It provides new opportunity, new innovation, that will help the processing sector and help others. Essentially, it comes down to a number of those things. Gene editing particularly, as a new and innovative technology in plant breeding, can unlock a toolbox of innovation that seed developers can use. It can lead to better nutritional values for the seed that comes from the process that farmers grow. It can lead to different biofuel profiles, for that matter, that are particularly good for biofuel use. It's a long-term kind of process.
The challenge we find now is that Canada seems to be kind of falling behind other jurisdictions that have created clarity in their regulatory plan for this new plant-breeding innovation to come along. That clarity lets those big biotech companies that are investing in seed development to invest in other countries and create the product in other countries. In canola, we badly need to maintain our competitive advantage by making it an innovative, friendly environment, obviously while maintaining the safety and efficacy of the products.