Thank you. That's a good question.
In terms of shipping them the quality wheat, the 360,000 tonnes of wheat, just to put it in perspective, our estimate this year for wheat is over 24 million tonnes in Canada alone. So it's only a small part of all of our wheat. There's lots of quality wheat for all of our other markets as well.
In terms of what comes up here in the quality standards of Colombian products, again, the advantage for us in doing a trade deal with a country in a more temperate climate is that they're not shipping the same products to us. It's bananas, it's coffee--things that we don't grow here.
I can't comment on the quality standards we would be negotiating. I presume that the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has minimum standards for health and safety of products coming into Canada that have to be met. I don't know what those regulations would be. For example, I can't comment on the thresholds that coffee and bananas would have to cross. I'm pretty sure, though, that they won't let in substandard products that would cause health risks for Canadians.