Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
To our friends here today, you talked about the fact that you have this wondrous opportunity, this wondrous market, but how do you intend to exploit it? It's all wondrous to say it's wondrous, but quite frankly that doesn't get you another pound of barley out of the Prairies, or out of Alberta, into the EU. How do you intend to do that? What's the plan to exploit the opportunity that you say is before you? What exactly would that be? Do you have a sense of what you want to do, or is there a sense of how you're going to do this? I understand the tariff piece. We can leave the tariff piece out of it.
The second question I'll ask—because I know my voice won't last very long—is about the other side of it, the non-tariff barriers, which, as all of us around this table know, is one of the biggest impediments to agricultural trade. Are you assured that there aren't any in this agreement, and if so, do you have it in writing?