First of all, with respect to the importance of the multilateral trade negotiations, it is certainly still the policy of the Government of Canada to support multilateral trade negotiations. As I said earlier, if there is movement, Canada is there and will be there. We still understand that there are some things you can only get in multilateral trade negotiations, and serious agricultural trade reform would be one of them. Strengthening of rules for what we call trade remedies, anti-dumping and countervailing measures, you can't get that bilaterally. It's clearly the best for business if there's one set of rules rather than what's been referred to as a spaghetti bowl of rules of bilateral agreements. Finally, the WTO is the most effective place for developing countries, particularly the smallest developing countries, to negotiate to use the leverage of their numbers. In the mandate for Canada's position in the WTO, we are asked to make a contribution to development through trade. So for all of those reasons we understand that multilateral trade is still important, that those negotiations are important.
I will leave the tricky question to Kirsten.