Yes, we do see opportunity for growth, not just in trade in North America but also in trade from our North American value chain to the world.
On the first part, within North America, expanding access for processed products like margarine and sugar-containing products does represent incremental growth opportunities that weren't available in the original NAFTA. For example, the original NAFTA was created at a time when the way we made margarine worked with the agreement, but now the technology has evolved and we no longer use hydrogenation. It was no longer possible to produce margarine in Canada and trade it to the United States without having tariffs on it.
That was not extended, unfortunately, to other products like shortening, so there are still a number of areas within NAFTA, or the new CUSMA, that are not tariff-free in agriculture, but the areas that were tariff-free remain tariff-free, and that enables us to continue to grow in the world. Being integrated makes us more competitive in exporting, whether it's to China or Japan or elsewhere.