 Everybody's putting in a really great effort to, you know, maintain production, improve yields and be environmentally aware and look after what we've got with the Great Barrier Reef. Nutrient or nutrient runoff can have various impacts on the Great Barrier Reef. Amongst those are the potential of increasing chronothorns' starfish outbreaks. Chronothorns are a natural part of the reef. However, on the barrier reef and many other reefs worldwide, these episodically break out. They eat too many corals so the corals can't recover. That's specifically bad during stress events like the current bleachings we have. It's all about understanding this. We work with the growers to understand it and if we understand it correctly then, you know, we keep the reef as resilient as possible because we're keeping all of our fertiliser on farm. We've saved about 82 ton of nitrogen over the 4,500 hectares in the project for the first year growers alone. It's a journey between us and the growers. Having projects like what Jason and Heidi are in, it educated me and I've been growing and came for a long time. We've always gone to the reef because it is a natural wonder and it's just beautiful and I want it to be there for my grandchildren, for their kids to enjoy. This plan that we're under, I reckon it's a great way and the more people that take it on board, the better it's going to be. Our main aim is to get the plant to use exactly what it needs. And no waste. Putting the right rate on, better in our pocket, better for the reef, better for everything. Together we can sort of figure out a really good way forward on how to optimise their production while reducing their input costs. Therefore it's more sustainable, the community benefits, the environment benefits, the grow benefits, it's a win-win for everybody.