Essentially, in terms of non-market economy status, when you find that non-market economy conditions exist, it means that instead of comparing the prices of the exports into Canada with those in China, you're using third-country information or some kind of surrogate information—because the thought is that the prices within China are not reliable—so that you're able to get credible and good margins of dumping on those investigations. Not having the ability to do that and being forced to rely on the prices within China, where there are serious concerns that there are a lot of distortions, would reduce the levels of the anti-dumping duties.
I've seen different estimates as to what those might be, including in the range of about 30 percentage points, so where we might have had duties of 50%, they would be going down to 20%. Those are estimates. It really depends on a case-by-case basis as to what the situation is on the ground. Yes, we're very mindful that the impacts of this could be significant.