I'm not going to speak about the tariffs for accessing product, because in this instance, a lot of the products that are produced in both Canada and Argentina or Brazil aren't exported to the other jurisdiction; they're brought to international markets. When you think about China as consuming 50% of global demand for minerals and metals, and the supply chain distance between our mining industry and the mining industry down there, the physical movement of product isn't a principal concern. What's more of a principal opportunity, I would suggest, is the movement of capital, the movement of people, and the strong linkages that already exist between Canadian mining companies and operations in those jurisdictions.
What we see as opportunities through this free trade agreement would be to strengthen the security of the movement of that capital, to strengthen the protections around those capital investments in those particular countries, as well as to enhance access for labour mobility, labour movement, and other non-tariff related areas of progressive trade agreements.