I was talking to the CEO of Yara, which is one of the world's largest producers of fertilizers. Not to get into all of those details, but if you don't put fertilizer on a particular crop, you could lose 50% of the yield. You can get into what types of fertilizers...and all these other different issues, but those are generic perspectives.
What I understand, and I don't know if this number is exact, but Belarus and Russia produce about 40%, give or take, of the fertilizers in the world. We are already seeing farmers around the world, particularly the big farmers, cutting back. Fertilizer costs are skyrocketing, because fertilizers are based on fuel. So you have a base fuel dynamic, and then if you've got a supply chain problem, those two factors will create an extraordinary availability problem, as well as a pricing problem. Obviously, we're already seeing pricing play into our equation. It will only become an exponential problem over the next three to six to nine months.