With respect to other countries, perhaps in the EU, I would defer to Ms. Tothova.
I would argue that it would be much more straightforward in a smaller geographic region, because even though you have the complex diversity of the markets or what's being exported, you don't have to layer on the geographic complexity that means that carbon intensity looks very different for the same commodity in different parts of the country.
The U.S. would be facing the same issues we are, as would, most likely, Australia. If we look across the EU as a whole, it would be different versus an individual country within the EU.