No, I wouldn't say that anything that broad in scope has come up.
We have come up with a number of provisions and chapters in relation to regulatory standards. We have a regulatory cooperation chapter for the first time in a free trade agreement that will address trying to get us on the same page on standards as they're being developed—that's one element. We're also advancing a chapter that will provide us both with the ability to provide assessments to each other's standards through our own agencies. In other words, a company looking to export into the EU market wouldn't have to go to an EU standard-setting body to get approval. We could do that in Canada, saving time and saving money.
In other areas we've talked about where we might be able to converge on standards over a longer period, but comprehensively this is a much broader issue. Standards in many areas between North America and the European Union are somewhat different. It's a rather lengthy and difficult task to harmonize them.