Thank you.
I want to turn to my second question. I will address it to Mr. Slomp, but I would appreciate it if Mr. Gobeil and Mr. Turp could also weigh in. I will build on this climate point.
Mr. Slomp, you mentioned the atmospheric river in B.C. last year and how extreme climate events can have devastating impacts on food security. Notwithstanding that atmospheric river, the folks in B.C. were still able to meet and provide what they were allocated. It created a stable supply chain. Mr. Gobeil mentioned this, and Mr. Turp talked about it as “food sovereignty”—this idea of national food security and food control and the ability to nourish your own people.
When we're dealing with supply chain disruptions, either from an unlawful war in Ukraine or atmospheric climate events.... Can you elaborate on how protecting supply chain management ensures predictability, in terms of the supply of food and the price of that food?
Perhaps Mr. Slomp can go first, then Mr. Gobeil and Mr. Turp.