Part of it is to try to use the negotiations themselves as leverage for dealing with issues. We've done that with the EU. We've used the fact that we're negotiating to encourage the European Union to focus on some GMO issues that we have with them, the point being that we won't sign a deal until they solve those problems, even if they're not in the text of the deal.
The other things we are doing are setting up committees. We have a joint veterinary management committee, on the livestock side, with the EU. We're hoping the negotiations will set up something similar for both canola or oilseeds, and also for grains, with the EU. It's also about building, I think, into the language of agreements adherence to international standards and international bodies and the rules and regulations they have set forward.
Minister Ritz has been a great champion on low-level presence in GMOs, as you know. There's a conference in Washington in two weeks that is trying to bring international groups together to establish some standards for that.
You can't just rely on the trade deal. You've also got to rely on the international standard-setting bodies as well. But the trade deals need to force the country you're negotiating with to adhere to those international standards, and there have to be enforcement mechanisms in it for recourse.