I'd make two points. One is, obviously it's difficult to port other systems into ours, particularly, the European Union's, which is able, at the commission level, to do things that, potentially, aren't necessarily part of the same federated structure that we possess here within the Canadian Competition Act specifically.
Our view isn't necessarily that there shouldn't be some standards, for instance, around the types of environmental messaging that companies are making. This relates back to climate disclosures and climate reporting—which is work that's also under way within both our department and the department of ECCC, and where, I think, there can be greater standardization around environmental messaging without necessarily trying to get outside of the remit of the Competition Act. That's where we would probably differ, which is to say, within the guise of the Competition Act and its constitutional underpinnings in the trade and commerce power, we are about that transaction, we are about that deception.