Yes. We know. Thanks, Minister. I just need to get to other questions.
When I look at the mandate letter that was given to your predecessor, the Hon. Marie-Claude Bibeau—it's now two years old—and I compare that with what other countries are doing, I think there's a decided lack of ambition in that document. I don't think it's commensurate with our agricultural place in the world.
Let me cite two examples: Australia has a national soil strategy; Denmark has developed an organic policy framework with a goal of making sure that 60% of all food in public kitchens is organic. These are countries that are leading the way.
I've talked to the organic sector. I went to the Organic BC conference in Penticton a couple of weeks ago. You can see the benefits in terms of less reliance on expensive inputs, greater resilience in the face of climate change, and higher profit margins for their farmers.
Where is your ambition in trying to match what other countries are doing when it comes to making our farmers less reliant on inputs and to making sure we have some kind of a national soil strategy, so that we're really unleashing the potential it has in helping our farmers deal with climate change?