They will be addressed in the negotiations. That's typical of our approach in negotiations. We will look for opportunities to establish fast-track mechanisms for dealing with the resolution of issues, for disputes in the area of sanitary-phytosanitary rules and technical barriers to trade. Because we have a large agricultural trade with India, we tend to have quite a number of sanitary and phytosanitary issues or disputes at any given time.
When the minister was in India three weeks ago, he met with his colleague on the agricultural side in India and pressed first of all on a number of specific SPS issues, the irritants in existing trade, but also on establishing a priority for addressing these issues in parallel with the negotiations. Because it will be critically important for the Canadian exporters, when we get to the end of the negotiations, to know that not just has the tariff been eliminated, but the technical barriers that they're having difficulty with have also been addressed, so that the access they're getting in the negotiation is real and they're actually going to get into the market.