I can say a couple of things.
First of all, the visit to China allowed the minister to meet with his counterpart. It allowed him to co-chair the China council for international co-operation on environment and development. That was an important session that was attended, in its final iteration, by the Vice-Premier himself to hear exactly the recommendations not only of Canada as co-chair but of those present. A wide range of countries, including our closest partners, the Nordics, the EU, etc., as well as the UN Environment Programme and civil society NGOs, were present and offered their very clear recommendations. Some of those included things as clear as “no new coal”.
There was an opportunity, at a very senior level, for China to hear clear messages about expectations around how it will conduct its program to address climate change—