It's extraordinarily important. CRIS, the Cannabinoid Research Initiative of Saskatchewan, is a couple of years old now. A symposium was held in August, at which I spoke. The basic science research that's being done in Saskatchewan, specifically in this program, is really extraordinary. A group was brought in from the Max Planck Institute in Germany. A Canadian—from Saskatoon, actually—who had been working there brought his entire team of 20 different researchers to Saskatoon to work on cannabis plant research. The professors are extraordinarily well trained.
There's a spirit of collaboration in cannabinoid research that is unusual, certainly in my experience, compared to other research initiatives. If we look at the collaboration or, if nothing else, simply at the communication among research institutions all around the world, be it in Israel, the U.S. or here in Canada, or even in places as diverse as the South American countries of Colombia and Uruguay, as Dr. Waisglass said, this is an area of inquiry that is absolutely moving forward at a breakneck pace. Innovations are going to be forthcoming that will be really quite remarkable.