I think this committee, as Mr. Charlebois said...and it's not a partisan element. I think that all parties are starting to get to the point where, if we can't find that pathway, there will be increasing pressure from the opposition and indeed from the backbenchers of our Liberal caucus to say, “Let's get on with it then.”
I know it's complicated in terms of how it will play out across the provinces, but that is the sentiment I see around this committee and indeed around Parliament Hill.
Just very quickly to you, Mr. Charlebois, you mentioned Europe. You mentioned the regulatory burden and some of the challenges and how farmers are protesting. I thought Mr. MacDonald had an interesting line of questioning, in that we're starting to see this idea of a carbon border adjustment mechanism. I'm one of the folks who would suggest that, if we don't start accounting for that, there's only so much that we can ask our own domestic industry to bear in terms of pricing before we do become uncompetitive—to the point that you were making.
What's your sense of what's happening in Europe and some of what the Biden administration is seeing? Do we think there will be a point in the future when that will start to become part of the trading mechanism for how we move agricultural products around the world? Where would Canada benefit in that? Our industry is quite sustainable. I see a world in which, if that were taken into account, we could actually be on a strong footing.