In the agriculture negotiations, it's not really about giving up all your tariffs. I believe what you're referring to is the issue of reductions in our over-quota tariffs for our supply-managed products. The tariff reductions issue is still under negotiation.
There is a category in the market access discussions called sensitive products, which we've talked a bit about here today. And as I said, our goal is to ensure that our supply-managed products can fit inside that sensitive products category, where there will be flexibility for how members provide market access improvements for those products.
Certainly for other countries, they will choose other types of products as their sensitives. For example, in the European Union they may choose some meat products to be their sensitive products. In other countries it could be grains, oilseeds, or products that are of great interest to our exporters here.
The whole issue of sensitive products, how many you can choose, and by how much do you reduce the tariffs or expand the quotas, is one of the very key issues in the negotiations. It is not yet resolved, although there has been some progress. But there needs to be a lot more progress before we can agree on the specific rules and start implementing them.