From a general perspective, in this negotiation with the EU we will be going far beyond what was negotiated with the U.S. in relation to the Buy American act. We'll be covering a lot more ground in the range of areas that will be subject to government procurement obligations, and there won't be as many exemptions as there were in that agreement. So it will be much broader, although that agreement could be seen as a starting point.
The EU has expressed a particular interest in utilities, so they will be interested in water services and energy services. They will be pressing for those kinds of things.
As you point out, they have some exemptions themselves. In the government procurement negotiations we're trying to figure out the EU system the best way we can to determine what flexibilities they have in their system so we replicate them in ours and have similar levels of flexibility on both sides. That exercise has taken us some time, but we're now getting to a fuller understanding of how the flexibilities or exemptions work within the EU.
On the issue of postal services, the EU has expressed a particular interest in courier services in the postal area. They've expressed interest in the issue of outgoing and inbound mail. We have no intention of changing the monopoly Canada Post has to supply mail service across the country, and we don't expect that will be challenged in any way.