In that regard, it's an illustration that the trade rules are not sufficient on their own to maintain economic relations. You have to use all the tools in your tool box.
Ultimately Congress had the authority to repeal that legislation, which they did in December 2015. Part of the success was a combination of the full support of our industry and a number of key allies in the United States in the industry, especially in the meat processing sector, in preventing the emergence of issues of that kind. This is why it's important to constantly do what we call advocacy, both at the level of our embassy in Washington and through our network of consulates, to have as much dialogue as possible with policy-makers and decision-makers ahead of decision-making to explain our perspective and why certain measures should not be.... COOL was always intended to serve a legitimate policy objective, but it's had enormously disproportionate impacts on the very well-functioning integrated red meat market in North America.