Thank you very much. It's great to be back with my former colleagues on the trade committee. I'm also on the agriculture committee, and this morning we had an opportunity to talk with the CFIA. One of the questions that came up had to do with the fact that these inspections are also done load by load by the farmers. We know exactly what it is that's going into the system, and fortunately we have great faith that the rest of the process works as well. Unfortunately, when a person can't give 100% assurances, which no physical scientist is ever going to do, that's when the political scientists jump in. We should all be understanding just how strong the system is and how great the product is that we're trying to sell.
I'd like to ask Mr. Verheul about some of the concerns and issues that I have. Right now the U.S. and China are busy trying to work on how they are going to move agricultural products. We are sidelined from both of those—the U.S. for obvious reasons that no doubt people have talked about, and China because of this issue we have going on now. What do you think we need to do to stay involved and continue to be relevant to the discussions taking place with the U.S. vis-à-vis our agriculture products and their potential movement?