Well, we always reserve judgment and encourage co-operation from both government and industry to make these working groups effective. The biotechnology working group established under the Canada-United States-Mexico agreement is helpful and it builds on what was negotiated in the trans-Pacific partnership. This is an area where we use technology in crop production, but if the regulatory systems are different in our countries, it means that we can't just grow it in Canada—even though it may be approved—if it's not approved similarly in the United States and Mexico.
By working together at this working group, we can co-operate on plant-breeding innovation technologies so that when we have an ability to grow something with improved technology we can actually export it from Canada to the U.S. and Mexico and work together as three countries. It would help us, as a bloc, to regulate similarly and to have the ability to export around the world.