I fully agree with my colleague here. I think more needs to be done in terms of data collection and having alignment, not just at the national level but at the international level as well, to make sure that we're using the same sources and methodologies to find that common benchmark across the board.
A big way that I think the federal government can play a role is, in particular, in the research side of things. Research is absolutely core to the mandate of the Canola Council of Canada. It's super important for canola farmers, as you can imagine. Many of the levy dollars that are collected go towards research, and so, to the extent that we will look at the next policy framework, for example, that will be coming up in 2028—those discussions are going to be starting very soon about what that could look like—by the end of this current cycle the agriscience cluster program, for example, will have essentially had stagnant funding over the past 15 years. We are, effectively, trying to do a lot more with fewer dollars as a result of inflation and other pressures in the research domain, and so I think that investing where we can in this will be extremely helpful. Having federal dollars go towards us, along with private sector dollars, will be extremely helpful. We need to have a significant investment from the federal government into research to help get the data, which is exactly what you're talking about.