It matters for two reasons. One, as we've indicated, is that we have identified some parts of the European Union where there is going to be greater opportunity for us.
Let's be honest: some cultures are more into beer and some cultures are more oriented to wine. Many of the former Soviet bloc countries are now free-standing countries and are primarily spirits-oriented societies. That's their culture, so our ability to sell them our products is a lot easier than us going to countries that are predominantly oriented in different directions. We see some significant opportunity. At one point, Slovenia, a relatively small country, was one of the fastest-growing markets for Canadian whiskey anywhere, a small base, but it was growing. We see real opportunity.
Just as I said that these kinds of agreements bring discipline to our own internal mechanisms in Canada, we see an opportunity for similar disciplines to be strengthened in Europe. Europe isn't homogenous, right? Every place isn't the U.K., and every place isn't Germany. They have differences, and we see some opportunities to improve the security of investments that people make in these different places.
Those would be, I would say, the two things that we see as opportunities, and yes, we expect that we will see more volume of Canadian spirits going there. It's going to be predominantly Canadian whisky.