I worry that it is generational. We'll never know that until it's in retrospect, obviously. I believe that Minister Bibeau made reference to this at the Canadian Federation of Agriculture meeting earlier this week.
This is the kind of event.... I guess I'll contrast it with the normal sorts of frictions we have in agricultural and agri-food supply chains that introduce variations in the range of 2% or 5%—something less than 10%. In my understanding, markets handle that very effectively, and messing with those functions probably creates more harm than good.
To put it into some context, Ukraine alone is geared up to feed a population probably in excess of 300 million people. The country is three weeks away from sowing spring crops, and they're in the middle of this onslaught. You have to assume that not only are the logistics of the Black Sea entirely shut down, for the most part, but the new crop may not be seeded. This is more of a 30%-level disturbance, which markets are going to be a little overwhelmed dealing with.