I think a very important aspect with whatever we're discussing is information management. If we are able to better manage our information and not work in silos, I think we will have 95% of the answers. Instead of being defensive, we can actually have a stand.
I'll give you a simple example. We have granting programs going from the provinces down to the producers, meaning implementation of best management practices. Do we have information on the implementation monitoring and what's happening with the BMPs? We don't. They're in the inventory over there, and there's no follow-up.
If we manage to work with the provinces on getting the information from whatever is being implemented through the granting programs down to the producers and follow each implementation grant the producers are getting, we will have a much better understanding of what is being done on the farms. It's a simple example.
Even within our institutions, with cross-sector collaboration, there's a lot of data available on animal vaccines and animal health, but it's not necessarily being integrated into the sustainability information and data. We can use that and work with them. There's so much information, and we're doing so much, but everything is being done in silos.