Thank you, Mr. Chair. I won't take the three minutes. I appreciate that Mr. Keddy wants to get through his motion.
Very briefly, Mr. Feldman, you talked about the costs of continuing with the softwood lumber agreement. It could be in the order of $900 million to $1.4 billion in upcoming litigation that the Canadian taxpayer would have to cough up.
What would be the legal costs of our ending the agreement and going back to secure the kind of access to the American market that we had on October 13, 2006, with the decision of the Court of International Trade? I'm trying to compare that $1.4 billion to what the potential legal costs are to actually get back to the decision that we threw away.