Yes. Access to markets is critical. We know we have to be an exporting company and industry. We have reasonable access today to many markets. We do have some significant trade barriers and tariffs, which are major obstructions to access to new markets. Vietnam, for instance, would be one of those. Vietnam has a 30% duty today against wild blueberries. China has the same, plus an ad valorem tax that makes it 47%, and this is true of cultivated blueberries as well, I believe, from British Columbia.
These are major barriers to access to markets. Those are the kinds of things that we need to try to change.
In the long term, we think that Vietnam can be a good market for us. You don't change the cultural eating habits of people overnight, so you have to start and you have to develop the market and that can take a long time.
Not everybody wakes up in the morning and thinks about wild blueberries first thing. Some people do, but nobody in Vietnam does. Therefore, we have to get people thinking about that and understanding the benefits of wild blueberries so that they will change their eating habits and consume, hopefully, large volumes.