You will be busy in the House next week, because we are going with Minister Ritz to China, so sorry about that.
In any case, to give you an example, when we had the Uruguay Round in the mid-1990s.... If you take a look at our export markets now, for 12 out of 16 or 17, we were not there, and they are major markets for us now—Russia, China, you name it. That is for the Uruguay Round.
For the free trade agreements, the best is to come, with Korea especially. You heard us on Korea, so I don't have to talk about that. In terms of Japan, we could still gain a major advantage over the U.S. if we had a free trade agreement with Japan. We are already big in Australia and New Zealand, and we can't afford to lose market share to the U.S. again in those markets. At the same time, if we had a free trade agreement or were part of TPP, then we could gain market share from the EU. That's one thing we have to look at.
Colombia was a good example for us, although it was difficult for you in the House. We have doubled our exports to Colombia in the last year, and it's still going.
We are exporting to Chile, which is also a major competitor for us. We're exporting to Mexico.
Multilateral, bilateral agreements have been a blessing for the pork industry, and if it had not been for those agreements over the years, I don't think we'd be here today, especially not at this size.