The E.U. does have steel safeguards in place for a number of product categories. Those have been in place as final measures since January of this year. The United States does not have a safeguard in place, but as we know, the section 232 tariffs that were imposed on steel and aluminum have a very similar effect. There are a number of other countries that have safeguard measures. Some of them are fairly targeted in terms of the products they are looking at, but I wouldn't call them the larger countries. It's not, you know, Australia or whatnot. I would say that the E.U. is the main one. The U.S. has those protections, as do certain other countries.
In the case of steel products, the global overcapacity definitely means that countries look for different ways to address some of the import challenges they're facing. There are a lot of trade remedies in that sector and we're seeing a lot of safeguards in that sector, as well, for those reasons.