Certainly, we know that the poorest and most vulnerable are impacted dramatically more by climate change, and yet they have had very little responsibility for it. We are seeing larger impacts around the world, impacts that we may start to face more of. I think increasingly we're starting to see weather extremes, storms and flooding that farmers are having to deal with here.
I think we have technology, we have knowledge and we have crop insurance. All of these things are very helpful for our farmers here in Canada. When we talk about small-scale farmers around the world, these are usually farms with zero mechanization, little access— particularly if you're a woman—to market and farming information, and no forms of insurance or very little opportunities for investment. There are some differences to how people recuperate and how resilient they are to those consequences.
I'll just add that we know that, in other parts of the world, what happens with climate change has broader global impacts. It affects our economies. It affects our trade. It affects our markets. It contributes to conflicts, and it contributes to our refugees, which is part of our aid budget as well. We really need to recognize that we need a global solution and we need to do our part, because it all comes back here as well.