We have many free trade agreements. We have the WTO agreement, which is a global agreement. We have free trade agreements with Chile, Peru, a variety of other countries, and of course, the NAFTA. All of those agreements coexist. The WTO agreement, for example, is an agreement that includes all the TPP countries. The NAFTA includes three of the TPP countries. Chile, in the TPP, has an FTA with every other TPP country, bilaterally, but will also have the TPP.
All of these international regimes coexist, just like municipal, federal, and provincial legislation coexist. The key is—and we always look at this when we're negotiating—to make sure there is no conflict between the two. If the TPP were to enter into force for Canada, a trader who is trading with Mexico or the United States would choose whether or not to take advantage of TPP rules, NAFTA rules, or WTO rules, depending on which provides them with the best framework for their trade.