I'll kick things off and ask my colleagues to jump in.
My first comment is that I hope we're not going to see a reduction in fertilizer. I think we need to make a distinction between emissions and actual fertilizer use.
How do we work on that in the right way?
I would just highlight that, as you pointed out, nitrogen fertility is extremely important. It's the second-most important external factor, after moisture, to canola production, so I think there's work, as I've alluded, that can be done on the emissions front. In my opening remarks, I mentioned our innovation strategy, with increased focus on performance, precision and the like. We have some tools to work with through precision agriculture. We continue to encourage the uptake of things like 4R practices and precision agricultural hardware and software.
However, we are going to continue to need fertilizer and fertility to support that yield intensification you're alluding to, so that we can continue to produce more canola but on more or less our existing land base. That's what we're going to look at doing, obviously through sustainable intensification.