I will say—and thanks for the question—that we're an incredibly innovative industry. Farmers innovate every single day when they enter the barn. The challenge really is that we're a bit stuck in terms of innovation. We have access to markets that we're not allowed to access because our trading partners have put non-tariff trade barriers in our way. Even if we were more innovative, Great Britain and Europe would find new ways of preventing the sale of our product in those markets.
What we really need is the Government of Canada to say to those foreign markets that our animal welfare standards are equal to theirs, that our innovation is equal to theirs and that the quality of our product is equal to theirs. We have negotiated trade agreements, but we simply can't access those markets. If we could access those markets, some of the questions around Vallée-Jonction might, in fact, not be asked today. We might not be facing this situation if we simply accessed the markets that we are supposed to have access to.
It's really incumbent on us to hold—