Maybe I can shoot at that one.
If you get a chance to look at the paper, I think you will see that I stress that I understand that the European-Canadian trade agreement is essentially small potatoes. Any of the numbers we look at say that less than 1% of Canadian GDP is what an agreement would be worth. We don't know, because we don't know what the agreement is. But that is a one-off thing. It is not 1% per year; it is one-off once implemented.
It is small. It is the illustration value that is more important than anything else. It is important for us to be clear that we're working with the Europeans and with the Americans and use that as a means of getting to the next level, which is the Asian.