Yes. In other words, what we have on the investment provisions in chapter 11 of NAFTA apply to all sectors, and then there are annexes and schedules that say that Canada—and there are others for the United States and Mexico—makes reservations on these sectors, on these particular regulations.
Another example is the Investment Canada Act. There's a very specific reference in the annex to the NAFTA that says that whatever commitments we've made under chapter 11, the Investment Canada Act is still the law of Canada, and the other parties agree.
That's kind of how it works. We set a standard across the board, and then we carve out those things we have concerns about. The traditional European and WTO approach was to say that we're only going to liberalize on these 16 things. So you have, for example, the general agreement on trade and services, the services side of the WTO. It only applies to the sectors that each member has volunteered it to apply to.
That means that in the first negotiation we put up six sectors, the Europeans put up twelve, the Americans put up ten, and the Japanese put up three, and then it's a tough haul to move to the next level of liberalization. This sets the high standard right at the outset, except for those things that you've excluded.