Yes, it has a very large food growing area and they grow lots of rapeseed. Our markets there are for meal and for biodiesel. Canola is a much better feed stock for biodiesel than any of its other competitive products. You get about 90% greenhouse gas reductions from conventional diesel using canola oil. We think that's a very promising market in the EU and there's very high demand for that in the European Union. That's good for us.
Also, canola meal is very highly valued in dairy rations. It's highly productive. You get a litre per cow per day extra production if you feed canola meal to dairy cows. Those are the markets that we're concentrating on right now and we think there's lots of promise.
Those are the kinds of things that have been in the market access plan for some time. It's a little bit of a different strategy in Europe but there is a very large plan and the canola industry is very proactive, very aggressive, in terms of how we move products into those markets.
I will say that we really are going to be watching carefully on the Canada-EU dialogue on biotechnology, because the need for us to have trade approval in a timely manner in the markets that we're selling into is very important for us. We have technology ready to go here that's improved, that can improve our competitiveness. If we aren't able to get those products registered in other markets, we can't export them because they're just not accepted, not being approved.