Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Once again, I want to thank the witnesses for being here and taking time out from their schedules. Mr. Risser, I appreciate your comments about how Canadians are used to playing ball fairly; the rest of the world doesn't always.
I want to comment on Mr. Cannis' point, which I think is sometimes related to frustration. I represent part of the wine industry in my riding. As soon as we make concessions for it, we get WTO challenges. Yet the thought process is that there are a lot of subsidies for foreign-owned wines, whether it be France or some other country. We have a hard time challenging them, so I guess that's part of my question.
I have two parts to this, either to you, Mr. Risser, or to the department officials. Do we have a hard time challenging these advantages that other countries have, or, as in the case that appears when our Canadian wine guys went to challenge some countries, they were not WTO-eligible challenges because those countries got around them and all those kinds of things? It's not like France and Italy aren't getting huge subsidies for the wine industry; we just have a hard time proving it.
My question to you and to the officials is this. Do we challenge these things, which I'm sure we do, or do we have a hard time because the subsidies don't appear in a form that is recognized by the WTO? To Mr. Risser first, and then--