As I mentioned before, there are some protections for public services, but these are limited. Probably the most important way in which they're limited is that there are no “reservations”, as they're called, country-specific exceptions, allowed against this fair and equitable treatment provision or the expropriation provisions of CETA in section D.
There's nothing in CETA that forces a government to privatize, but let's say they privatize waste-management services and a European investor becomes established. If a new government comes in and reverses that in a way that displaces that European investor, it would have the right to bring a claim against Canada through the investment court system, even if we had a reservation in that area, which we don't. There are no reservations allowed against these fundamental investor rights.