There were. The consultation process began in 2009 with the Canada Gazette notice, and it was supplemented in the years following that with web-based invitations for Canadians to comment and give input.
What happens in these sorts of things is that from the submissions that are received, it soon becomes somewhat evident who's most interested in the deal and in the negotiations, how they will end, and what the provisions will be. As I said earlier, our largest agricultural export to Ukraine is pork. One of the groups we spoke to was made up of Canada Pork International, the Canadian Pork Council, and the Canadian Meat Council. We spent a fair bit of time with them, especially toward the end of the negotiations, to do everything that we could to make sure that the final outcome would be satisfactory to them. From all indications, including their public expressions of support for the deal, I think we succeeded on that front.
There were others as well. Spirits Canada, Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters, and the Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance also have issued public expressions of support for the deal, so I think that we can be happy that there's good support for this deal. I'm not aware of any concerns or any stakeholders who feel that there's anything deficient about the deal.