It's more the tariffs they use to protect their domestic industries. As I said, one of the ones we're facing just on feed barley, which is kind of the lowest class of barley going into Japan, is $113.00 per metric tonne right now, which would become zero. That's a pretty significant whack there.
They're very restrictive on the food barleys, on anything that's considered to be food. It's a real tough slog getting into Japan and a lot of the Asian countries. You have to spend years and years. It's all about relationships. That's kind of what the Alberta Barley Commission has been working on since about 1993, I believe. We've spent a lot of money going over there and trying to develop those relationships. It's a slow, hard slog trying to get into those, but once you develop the relationship, then you can't get in there, because you have the tariff barriers against the food-grade grain.
The good thing is that we have the quality and the type of product they want. There's a difference between what the government's trying to do to protect domestic producers—they don't have a lot of them—and what the industry would like to import.