Of course. Thank you for that question.
I gave two series of statistics, and they are really projections according to a general equilibrium model. And I am not qualified to go into the details of this, but the study that was tabled, done jointly by Canada and the European Union in 2008, said that if there was a free trade agreement between Canada and the EU, by the year 2014—that's quite close, four years from now—the annual real income gained by that year would be 0.08% of the EU gross domestic product. That's very small. And it would be much larger for Canada, at 0.77%, but still rather small.
Yet these gains would also translate into an increase of about 24% of Canadian exports to the EU, which means about €17 billion, and about a 20% increase of EU exports to Canada, or about €8.6 billion by 2014. Now these are billions, but recognize that in terms of our overall exports, our world exports, that's still very small. We export more than $1 billion a day to the U.S. So these are relatively small gains. They're not insignificant, but they're not very, very large.