Usually tariffs are the number one issue within free trade agreements. This agreement addresses not only regulatory cooperation; we've heard the examples of customs administration, technical barriers to trade, and sanitary and phytosanitary issues. These include the recognition of equivalence in the production, processing, and inspection systems. You've heard examples of this in the meat sector, and for the canola, oilseeds, and some of the grain sectors as well. The creation of an agriculture working group, for example, will be dedicated to the exchange of information, with an effort on transparency and the timely approval of new traits, as well as cooperation on low-level presence.
These mechanisms are planned, and this is very new. This is what is so new for CETA.