As the text comes together and we have a pretty good idea of what we'll see, probably tomorrow, it is shaping up to be a pretty good package for most areas of Canadian agriculture. We're getting a lot of what we want to achieve in export competition and in domestic support or domestic subsidies. We're also doing well in many areas of market access. We probably got more ideas into the text from Canada than from any other country.
We have a particular challenge with respect to supply management in sensitive products. We have a much harder line in the negotiations than any other country has on those issues. We continue to call for no tariff reductions and no tariff quota expansion for supply management. But everyone else around the table has basically agreed on what would happen in terms of both tariff reductions and to a lesser extent, tariff quota expansion for those products.
So we are outside of the emerging consensus on that issue, but we're continuing to make it very clear that our position is no tariff reductions, no tariff quota expansion for supply-managed products.