I'll try to answer that.
Having been an ex-grain trader many years ago, even though I'm president of the malting industry, 3% may not sound like much if you're dealing on a $250 CIF but when you start adding up $6 or $7 a tonne.... If I'm a trader, I don't care if I'm working for any of the line companies in Canada or CWB, or what have you, if I'm a broker in another country and if I can make the trade at $2 a tonne less I'll do it. Certainly, in the malt industry we're going to see some significant increases. We already have a very good trading relationship in Korea and we have for a number of years.
If I can just add, having grown up on a farm just outside of Ottawa here, and Randy being from Saskatchewan, even when you take a look at value added as far as beef and pork, for the grains industry, for every tonne of pork or for every tonne of beef it's going to be that much more barley or wheat going through those animals. It's going to be that much more fertilizer. It gives the farmers—albeit you're not going to have more farmers in Canada, obviously the numbers are declining and the farms are getting bigger—more income opportunity and more marketing options whether they're going to grow barley, wheat, or canola, depending on the prices in any given year to meet those needs and those value-added industries.