I haven't heard anything from the trade side that would suggest that the Japanese people or that Japanese trade is concerned about the standards we have in place.
I'll give you my perspective. Traditionally regulators in all countries have looked at their responsibilities and have not worried as much about collaboration with other regulators. I think this is something that has changed. Certainly we've seen a change. It started with NAFTA. I'll use specific references to pesticides, where there is now much more unity between Canada and the U.S., and more recently, including Australia and the European Union. We're now seeing regulators work more closely together.
I think we have an opportunity to sit down with Japanese regulators and see if we can harmonize policies along the way. We have to provide confidence to both Canadian consumers and Japanese consumers that harmonization of regulations is not a dilution of safety standards. What it does allow us to do is to target resources in monitoring as opposed to duplication of efforts.
So rather than see that as any kind of a dilution, the key to success is going to be proving that we are, in fact, strengthening monitoring systems through avoidance of duplication.