I think members around the table will realize this is a very complicated business. That said, there's not much here that people haven't seen before, because they've been digging around in this dispute for four or five years, many of them much longer than that. I've been involved in it myself for eight years. So I suspect the amount of new information that has to be digested is not as great as you might think.
However, if people need a little more time to assess some of the issues that are in play here, we'll give them more time. We have to get going, though, because it will require Parliament to execute this agreement. We're going to have to have a framework that will allow and enable provinces to put in place an export tax, which could come into play at the low end of the market, and return the revenues to that province for their use. That's going to require some legislative acts on the part of Parliament. I don't want to wait until fall on that.
We're going to have to deal with the issue of quota, because some provinces in bad markets will opt to have lower duties but subject themselves to a quota arrangement at the bottom of the market. That will require some legislative and regulatory clarity as well. And we have all the complexities around this, as members have said--dispute resolution, unwinding of deposits, who's in and who's out, remanufacturers. It's a very complex agreement.
I can tell you, if we do not put people's feet to the fire, if we don't push them very hard, we could be talking like this at this time next year. Because I just know that this is an issue you could spend your whole career on, and we think it's time to press on. We'll be reasonable, but we're not going to wait forever.