I don't have those numbers from 2005 at hand, but the numbers I gave earlier about our historical success were measured between 1981 and 2011. Those numbers are that, during that time, the energy used to produce canola dropped by 43% and the land use efficiency improved by 25%.
We're going to 40% going forward, but as of 2011 we had increased land efficiencies by 25%. During that same time, we saw a 71% decrease in greenhouse gas emissions in growing the crop.
I don't have the numbers lined up for that particular benchmark that you're talking about, but those are from the time period of 1981 to 2011.