Canada is predominantly an exporting nation in food production and everything else. What I cannot bear is further increases in my costs that I cannot offset in another direction. When it comes to what China and India may choose to do on a political front, Copenhagen is going to answer that.
I finished planting soybeans on May 24 and travelled to Copenhagen on May 25 to take part in negotiations with other countries around a conference table on where the sum of this is at. At the end of the day, all farmers in the world are the same: we're managers of carbon and nitrogen. We're looking for clear policy, because when I came back home, my bean plant didn't care whether the carbon dioxide it just sucked up was from my Chevy or from a Shanghai coal mine.
The bottom line is that targets will be set. Canada is in a leadership position to offer technologies and abilities right now. We need to make sure we go there with the best opportunity to show the world what we can do. We can't afford to lose lock-step on this, because primary sectors are losing more and more all the time without a proper policy front.