That's why I made the point that they obviously need 80% of their requirements. This isn't about us trying to compete or out-compete the peasant farmers in Colombia; it's about our ability to fill the same market that the U.S. might be filling. If we're not there, the U.S. will fill it anyway. We're saying give us the same opportunity as the U.S. to fill that market.
There's one other thing I forgot to mention earlier, Mr. Chair, and that is on our own ethanol industry. The Colombians are trying very hard to get Canada to eliminate the incentives that your government has generously allocated for the ethanol industry. As you know, Brazil and the U.S. are already far ahead of us. If we want to build an ethanol industry in which we don't just simply import the feedstock or import the ethanol, we simply cannot eliminate, with the Colombian agreement, the incentives that are in place for our ethanol industry.