I hope we can continue along this line of thought. I think Mr. McCabe brought up a point that I was alluding to earlier, namely that trade deals don't necessarily result in the trade conditions you're trying to get to. From a producer's standpoint, you can see that you're opening up a big market; there's a big opportunity. As a processor, you might look at that a little differently if your technology isn't up to speed or you have some internal issues that mean you are not able to compete against other countries, either currency-wise, labour-wise, or otherwise. Then you have the consumers. As one of our colleagues asked, where does this end up with the consumers, the people we are representing here at the table today?
We're getting a good sense that producers see this as a good deal, but I'd like to maybe bring it back to Mr. McCabe. We have the Canada Border Services Agency that's going to play a role here. We have the CFIA that plays a role here. We have Industry Canada. I tweeted this morning that we're conducting consultations across Canada on the TPP, and there's a parl.gc.ca website where we can ask for input. But from a practical perspective, how do we see this rolling out, and what is the risk? What are the risks for processors and consumers? It's not that I'm against this, or that our government is against it, but we're trying to analyze it, not just jump in with it.