Thanks, Chair.
Mr. White, you mentioned in your answer to a previous question that it's important that you have, on the fuel standard, domestic supply—and I think you're carefully choosing those words—and that not much is happening yet. In fact, you have the biodiesel refinery in Hamilton closing, and the reason they were closing was the flood of cheap seed stock and biodiesel from foreign countries, such as used cooking oil, soybean and corn from the United States.
The reason that we oppose the Liberal fuel standard is that it adds 17¢ a litre to Canadian consumers, so it's another consumer carbon tax. It is also one of the most complicated pieces of legislation in our history, and the regulatory red tape has made it impossible for Canadian canola growers and Canadian biofuel growers, let's say, to compete with cheaper foreign stock. Is that a fair assessment—that the system, the way it is set up now, is not going to benefit Canadian canola growers?
Have you done an assessment of the impact? Will this be a financial gain? Have you done that analysis for Canadian canola growers as the system is now?