That's a great question.
On an annual basis, approximately 20 million tonnes of canola are produced. About 10 million tonnes of that is now value added. It's crushed at a processing facility instead of being sold as the raw product, as seed.
Quite frankly, our two biggest export markets when it comes to biofuels would be to satisfy our domestic market. About $640-odd million a year go to the European Union, and that's really driven by their strong demand for canola-based biofuels. In the United States, it would be a combination of oil for cooking, for other value added. We do think if we got that clean fuel regulation correct, as you alluded to, that could be another 1.3 million tonnes annually that would be crushed here, roughly the size of our Japanese export market.
Biofuels have been critical as far as hedging against trade volatility is concerned.