I think it's the most important question in this negotiation.
Going back to Australia and New Zealand, they completed bilateral negotiations before they agreed to the accession. Both countries, to my understanding, are saying they need to implement those bilateral agreements as part of the condition of their support for the accession.
What is interesting is that Australia and New Zealand are going to get unlimited duty-free access for beef. Apparently there was some political reaction in the U.K. to that, so they came back to Canada and said that we are only going to get a tariff-free quota of 14,000 tonnes that we are going to share with five other countries, which is obviously on a completely unlevel playing field compared to Australia and New Zealand.
You're right that some of these deals have to be dealt with in the bilateral agreement. That's the point we've been making all along to the negotiators: don't get the accession deal ahead of the bilateral negotiations.
We have time right now to push on the bilateral negotiations. I think we need to make it clear to them that in order to have Parliament support this, they need to make some serious concessions and bring their requirements in line with the WTO and with both the World Organisation for Animal Health and Codex. Those were pretty much the goals we achieved with the current membership of CPTPP and what every new member should meet.