Yes, sure.
The TPP is in full swing. There are three issues in TPP that are of concern to the forest products industry. The first one is that we want to ensure that the provisions in NAFTA, especially around chapter 19, continue to be enforced—i.e., they don't get negotiated away. Chapter 19 is the dispute resolution chapter in NAFTA, which is tied into the softwood lumber 2006 treaty between the U.S. and Canada, where ultimately we have access to those dispute resolutions at the end of the day.
In softwood, as you may know, there is an arbitration panel—the London court of arbitration—but we don't want to lose our ability to go through the NAFTA process and be able to use those dispute resolutions.
There is noise from Japan around log exports and around our tenure system in British Columbia. That intrudes into TPP as well as in the Japan free trade discussions. The noise has been that in the TPP there's a view that the U.S. or Japan might want to see elimination of our log export restrictions. Whilst we all need to work towards some rational construct there, it's a very, very complicated issue that has far-reaching impacts for the coastal industry. We want to ensure that as those discussions go on, we're fully informed and are providing input.
On the tenure piece, there's a view that because B.C. has 95% crown ownership, somehow that constitutes a subsidy. We're not going to be changing our tenure system any time soon, so we have to make sure that any kinds of trade agreements there respect the tenure system, respect our access to the NAFTA chapter 19 piece, and respect the fact that people have invested a whole bunch of capital in this business on the basis that they know there's a log supply there.
So changes to the log export policy have to be very thoughtful and measured.