The non-tariff part was important to us and the TPP did address that. As you may or may not know, Canada participates in something known as the World Wine Trade Group. With that group, which includes all the new world wine producers, including Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Argentina, Chile, etc., we have developed agreements over the past 20 years or so, such as an MOU on winemaking practices, labelling agreements, a definition of icewine, and things of that nature.
The hard work that we've done over the past 20 years was put into the TPP agreement. All those non-tariff barriers had been addressed by that addition to the TPP agreement.
I'll give you an example in terms of labelling. Different countries have different labelling rules for variety, volume content, alcohol content, and country of origin. It costs a lot of money when a small Canadian producer wants to export and they have to redo a brand new label for 50 cases, for example. Having that in the TPP means that our labels are now accepted in all those TPP countries. If there is a specific label requirement there, it can be stickered on once it arrives in that country. That's a significant cost advantage for a country that's largely just entering the export market.