Yes, we have. We're certainly aware of the level of interest in that particular issue from the east. Some of our highest priorities in the goods area generally include wood and wood products. We've certainly made that clear to the European Union.
The other thing we made clear is that when we're talking market access with the European Union, we're not going to talk simply about tariffs. We're going to take a much more global approach to the whole issue of market access. Our perspective is going to be asking what it takes to get our product into the EU market—not what it takes to lower the tariff, but what it takes to get the product into the EU market. That means we have identified specific sanitary and phytosanitary issues, including the kind you mentioned, as well as other technical barriers to trade that they have, which currently tend to block our exports. So by looking at market access in that more global kind of picture and orienting it towards what it takes to get into the market, I think we'll have a much better chance of getting real and lasting access.