One of the reasons they've done it on steel, for example, is that there is a price on carbon in Europe if you're a steel producer. However, there is no price on carbon in Europe if you're an agriculture producer, so you cannot use a border carbon adjustment to level a playing field if there's no price that's being paid on one side.
Again, the European approach on agriculture tends to be many, many carrots. If you look at what they're trying to do on soil carbon, for example, you'll see that it's about how to encourage soil carbon farming and how to do it in a positive way.
Again, they tend to do it with a lot of burden. There are a lot of issues from European farmers. However, the premise is different in that they are not looking at it as a tax; they are looking at how they can do a better job building very generous incentives to encourage the transition.