Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I would just like to say that my dad would be pretty proud, Patti, of the industry and how it has developed. He was one of the first 10 growers to grow what was called rapeseed in 1959 in Manitoba. When you're talking now of a $780-million increase in opportunity, that's tremendous for an industry and tremendous for our country, never mind the jobs you've indicated.
Speaking to my pulse friends, when I was growing pulses in the late 1980s I didn't know there were that few acres in the province as a whole, but when you consider that soybeans have been the third-largest crop in Manitoba for the last four years running, that's a tremendous change and opportunity. We need to have exports for those products.
With my experience in wheat, Mr. Dahl, and given the comments you've made about the potential increase in exports of wheat being 20%, can you—each of you—elaborate a little bit on.... From your presentation, Mr. Dahl, I gather there were a couple of things left at the end that you might want to elaborate on.
Could you each do that, please?