It's more in that sanitary-phytosanitary realm, and it could be anything from asking us to produce the documentation that says a product is safe when they pioneered the document, pioneered the whole thing in the first place. It could be back to just, for example, a testing regime, or what needs to be done, say, on the bulls that are housed in Canada in order to export the frozen semen. There are fairly standard protocols, and there is an AI program across Canada that's administered by the CFIA. Everything is to enact a standard that meets EU and China's demands, and everywhere else around the world. Suddenly they might want that plus 10, just as an example, so then you end up with basically a trade barrier until you get that settled.
Those are some of the things that we see, as it's a region that's prone to demands that can go beyond what's normal in the world trading environment, and they can also hold up based on a lack of understanding of animal health issues and what certain diseases really mean.