The agreement that we reached in Hong Kong certainly did not go as far as we would have liked. As we and other countries entered Hong Kong in the weeks before the conference, we were forced to collectively recalibrate our objectives. We did so to avoid another all-out collapse of the conference, as we had seen in the previous ministerial conference in Cancun in 2003.
We were pushing very hard to set a target end date for the complete elimination of export subsidies by 2008, and at the end of the day we couldn't get the Europeans, specifically, to agree to that timeline. We agreed to a date of 2013.
So it certainly didn't meet our objectives. It was at least an agreement of intent and showed the commitment by members to eliminate these massive export subsidies, but we see it as an interim step and we would hope to further reduce that deadline closer to where we are now. Hopefully we can achieve that by the end of the year.