Yes, we have a robust system to approve products. If a region like Europe decides to remove tools from their own farmers' tool box for quite often political reasons—I'll say it—why should Canadian farmers then suddenly lose access to those same tools to combat the very real pest pressures that they have here, to grow sustainably, to be able to rotate their chemistry and to do the right things agronomically? That's what we're facing. If we go down this path of reciprocity on crop protection, you will end up with just a handful of products approved globally that farmers can use and then all the problems that brings.
I often say that, when Europeans travel in Canada, they don't bring their own bag lunch. They eat our food confidently, and we do the same when we travel there. We have to be realistic in the standards that we're imposing and accept that there are different approaches in different regions.