Thank you for the question.
I will begin.
Certainly there are hundreds of issues on the list to be addressed. Some of them are canola issues. Sometimes issues take time to resolve, so it's not realistic to think that the list is going to be zero, because issues take time to resolve.
I would say from our experience that more resources would help resolve issues quicker. When there are priority issues, as what we had with China, we had sufficient resources to deal with that from government, including the market access secretariat. When there are pressing issues, there are resources.
But smaller issues that still could be solved with attention take a back seat when there are not resources. That's part of why we see so many issues on that list of issues to be addressed. There are non-tariff issues on that list—for canola, for example—as there are some tariff issues.