They are serious irritants; they're not huge impediments.
If you were to ask us what our number one interest is in, for example, India, China, or Korea, it's not getting rid of the trade impediments; it's getting rid of the market resistance and cultural impediments. Most of where the government has been spending its money is in helping those nations understand how to be better customers.
That being said, there are small trade impediments—we've detailed them, and I can send you the list—that these trade agreements will help get us over. I'll give you an example: within the European Union, where you wouldn't expect much trouble, every now and then one of the nations comes up with a requirement that paper or wood must meet a set of standards that makes no sense at all in Canada, because basically it would only happen in the Netherlands.
In the trade agreement being negotiated, we, along with the European industry, have asked for an annex setting out the standards for government procurement so it would be free from these harassing.... They are small things, but sometimes small things are just enough for the production of one mill.