They are separate. Clause 1831 refers to what types of transactions EDC management can enter into to decrease the risk on their own account, whereas 1833 has to do with transactions they can enter into to diminish the risk on our behalf—so on our books, on the government's account.
An example of this, for instance, can be when airlines have difficulty paying back loans that were distributed for the purchase of aircraft. When the airline goes to a bankruptcy court, EDC can easily, on its corporate account, restructure its loans. Here again, what is being sought is clarification of the current wording in the act to enable EDC to basically do the same type of restructuring on our own, on Canada account exposure, that it can do on its corporate account exposure.