It would include Somalia, Eritrea, many of the sub-Saharan countries, and Ethiopia.
If I may say as well, Mr. Van Kesteren, one thing that's happening in some of these countries that bothers me—I'm European, so I can perhaps say this—is I think the European influence, where they're against hybrid seeds.
Here's a very quick comparison. A farm that has opened is owned by the president's nephew and joint-ventured by a Thai company. Their methods have created a yield of half a tonne per acre. They have all of the equipment and all of the money they need. Our yield is two tonnes per acre, and we can get to three and a half tonnes per acre.
These host countries must understand that in North America, in both Canada and the United States, we've been using hybrid seeds for years. Our yields this year were because of one thing: we used a seed that was capable of resisting the pesticide that we used to kill the weeds that are completely intrusive.
That's something I think the Canadian government should be working on.