What I've often heard on the Japanese side is that this is an interesting trade deal. There is not strong opposition in Japan—unusually—because there is this complementarity in agriculture. There is no major risk for Japanese agriculture, but there's a lack of strong backers. So this was the issue for a long time. But in the wake of the visit of the Emperor last year, there has been a will to upgrade the relationship between Japan and Canada, and this is seen as part of that upgrade, that partnership. So there is a window there. That's the big picture.
As to canola, I don't think there will be major opposition, though the refiners of oil in Japan might object. There's an interesting anecdote I can relate. It's not for P.E.I., with its GMO-free canola, but for the bigger amount of canola being exported from Canada to Japan. It is genetically modified canola, and it has been a sensitive question in Japan. Some of the canola seeds would fly off the trucks between the harbour and the refining factory, and then they would grow in the fields and they couldn't be killed by Roundup, because they were Roundup Ready. There were worries in Japan, and NGOs have been active in pointing out that there could be gene flow from the canola to the vegetables growing nearby. So suddenly, sending refined canola, as oil, would remove the problem and you could have NGOs on your side.