The main advantage we see is the possibility of accessing the markets for lower to medium qualities of wheat and barley that currently are subject to very high tariffs, which make Canadian production uncompetitive in that region. That is the main advantage, the main market that we can access favourably.
I think one of the areas of concern—I wouldn't say that it's of concern, but rather that we would ask that attention be placed on it—is with respect to the commitment on cooperation around biotechnology. The previous question and answer revolved around genetically modified products that originate from Canada and how we maintain our ability to export non-genetically modified products when we have a handling system that does handle genetically modified goods. With regard to acceptable tolerance levels and synchronized approval processes for these new technologies, we believe there are workable solutions, but we'll have to let the governments negotiate and work out those details.