I think the key point is that this FIPA is not an instrument pertaining to market access in terms of investment. It's not intended to open up sectors on either side that are currently not open—and we have ours, too. This is an agreement to basically protect investment, by and large, once it's in the market.
What have we given up? I would say very little. We've basically undertaken not to discriminate against Chinese investments once they're undertaken and once they're here in Canada, but that's the policy framework we currently have—we don't make it a practice to discriminate against foreign investors based on their nationality now—so all we're really doing is undertaking a legal obligation to do what we're already doing, and in return, Canadian investors now have the same protections in China.