As far as high-value countries are concerned, the perspective we like to take with canola is that we are a high-value product. We compete favourably, with our health profile quality, with a lot of the oilseeds and vegetable oil products out in the world. Japan is certainly a high-value country, but it is also a very stable country. The demand doesn't change a whole bunch for the canola. We'd like to see the processing being done in Canada for that market. The TPP offers access to a lot of the growth countries, and that's, I think, where canola definitely benefits. In Vietnam, the preferential tariff situation that we would get, or the detrimental tariff treatment we would get with this agreement relative to Vietnam, which is a hugely growing market, is something that definitely benefits us.
As far as premium markets are concerned, we have a very high-quality product, like the beef, that does demand a higher price in the marketplace.