I have to confess that some of that is a little hazy now, since they just recently passed the Lisbon Treaty and are sorting out some of their respective roles within the European Union. Generally, when we reach agreement on all of the substance of the negotiations, that will be between us and the European Commission, so we will do an initial sign-off of the agreement. We'll then have to go through a legal scrub to ensure that all the provisions are going to have the legal effect we intended. We will have to have the agreement translated into 23 languages, which is what the European Union requires, which will take a considerable amount of time too. At the end of the day, the European parliament will need to approve the agreement formally. Because we're going beyond where a lot of traditional trade agreements would go, and going right into some of the responsibilities of individual member states, member states will also have to approve the agreement, or at least all 27 will have to ratify it. It will be a long and complicated process. We're hoping to accelerate it, and there is even the possibility of the provisional application of the agreement while some of this is happening. It will be a complex process.
On June 15th, 2010. See this statement in context.