We are very familiar with the Canadian agriculture policy that's being developed right now.
One of our main focuses with a program like that.... Canadian agriculture is some of the most sustainable agriculture in the world. It's very important for us, when we talk about Canadian agriculture, to continually focus on the concept of needing to increase our productivity because the world needs Canadian products. We need to frame Canadian agriculture in that lens of productivity and innovation.
I'm not super familiar with the resolution, but it's important to have that frame. We can't look at agriculture and farmers as essentially farming to try to produce carbon reductions or require them to meet certain goals, because their job is to produce food as efficiently and productively as possible. Certainly you can look at incentives and any kind of market-based approach where you're providing a fair market value for a farmer who is, in the course of their production, protecting an area of biodiversity or wetlands, or reducing carbon emissions from the way they're producing that food. It's certainly something we'd like to see. Any kind of market-based incentive is good.
We always need to maintain the frame that their job is to produce food. It's to produce what they're producing. It's not to necessarily provide the sort of general goods and services that people would like to see from that landscape. That landscape is for food.