I think that what we've seen—and I'd welcome Chris's comments on it on the processing side as well—speaking from an operating company that builds plants and has been involved in the construction and development of processing facilities, the more of these things we do, the more local expertise and experience we develop.
You mentioned the fact that we have a lot of American and German pieces that come into a plant, whether it's a flour mill or a canola processing plant.
We in Canada deal with a number of unique commodities as well. A canola plant is generally grown in Canada. The commodity itself is grown in Canada, specific to Canada. It has properties that are such that its processing is a little bit unique.
You need to develop some expertise, and we have been developing expertise with respect to canola processing here in Canada, whether it's suppliers of equipment, pieces of knowledge, and so on. We're seeing that expand, and the increased capacity in the production and the value-added side of things is undoubtedly going to add to that inventory of capacity to allow that to happen.