Thanks for the question. I appreciate it.
It's obviously a multi-faceted answer. To be clear, the beef industry in Canada has been challenged over the last three or four years at least with some pretty debilitating droughts. That has really commanded the direction of our cow herd, yet we've been able to make advances in the yield of beef per animal. I would say that investing in those very high-quality trade agreements such as the CPTPP.... That agreement has yielded huge benefits to Canadian cattle producers, in particular in markets like Japan and Vietnam, markets with the highest growth potential and ones that we've actually realized over the course of the last five years.
I wanted to just accentuate the fact that it needs to be on the high-quality side. In the alternative, if we don't meet the bar that CPTPP has set, it quite simply amounts to nothing. The details really are critical. I would focus on a science- and rules-based trade agreement.