Thank you very much.
With respect to your question about protection for individual companies, I think the protection is in following the option A or option B elements in terms of the companies' exports and the allocations. Those replace the trade remedy option that would be open to the United States were there not an agreement. So the protection for individual companies is in following either option A or option B, and all the necessary preconditions for those. That is the first point with respect to individual companies. They will not have the legal costs we have had until now, because if they work within the programs of the two, then there's no requirement for that.
I think the dispute settlement mechanism anticipates differences in terms of specific measures taken on the part of governments. Therefore, it's for the federal government to lead on any of those arbitration elements that require costs on its part; those are types of costs we will incur in those types of situations. Of course, provinces will want their own litigation teams, and they will pay for those themselves. In addition, to ensure that everyone understands and is onside with respect to what we have all agreed to, the federal government will of course be working with provinces when asked about the conformity of any new measures with the agreements. So those are other costs the federal government will be incurring in support of provincial measures in the future to abide by the parameters of the agreement, which we've all agreed is sufficient for us to implement.