The answer to that would be no, we have not set rules in advance, but we have in terms of other trade agreements. This has been a reasonably new phenomenon in terms of the trade agreements, that there is the facility for this ongoing role for, as we define them, the civil society organizations.
But I stress very much that we do not see this as being an EU evaluation by ourselves in isolation. The preferred route we have is that it is a joint body that reviews with our partners who have similar partners from the Canadian side.
I very much stress that it is that form of joint evaluation we see as being the enduring value that a body such as that would add. Ultimately, as we see it, for the success or otherwise of trade, it's going to be absolutely imperative that the business communities, those who are affected in terms of the employees in the industry, and the wider areas such as agriculture, consumers, etc., I've mentioned, have this ongoing voice in terms of the direction the agreement goes, and the implementation.