This is a good question. Let me answer it in two parts.
First of all, the residues present in pulse crops in the vast majority of cases can't even be detected using today's analytical methods, so they're not different from zero. Our residues in pulse crops from Canada are so low that by and large we wouldn't worry, for example, if we had an MRL in Canada that was 5 parts per million but it was 4 parts per million in Colombia and 10 parts per million in Chile, because what we are asking to have as a safeguard is that even though we can easily come within any of those limits, even though they differ, what we can't tolerate is the near zero default tolerances of, let's say, 0.01 parts per million.
So the differing MRLs, those could become an issue some day. They aren't the issue that we're discussing today. It's the near zero default tolerance.