We've been addressing this situation over the last number of years. I can say that it's been on a couple of fronts. One is that we have established new services with China that would give them access to a track service, which obviously costs more but would meet the needs of Canadian receivers much better. Tracking and delivery confirmation and service standards are a bit more in line with what e-commerce shoppers expect. Right now, what they are taking advantage of has no delivery standards, has no tracking, no guarantee, and therefore does not get priority treatment in terms of how it gets delivered. It can take a long time to actually cross those borders and get delivered.
We have been working on a couple of fronts. One, as my colleague Mr Jarvis mentioned, is that at the Universal Postal Union, together with a whole bunch of other countries that feel the same way we do—given that China is a huge net exporter of these kinds of small, low-value items that clog up the network and are taking advantage of very dated postal rates—we have been successful in moving, over the next number of years, some increments that will cause the compensation for the cost of those services to China to increase significantly and be much more in line with some of the costs that they incur.
The real opportunity, though, is that those services were never meant for the e-commerce opportunity. They were never meant for full tracking within a reasonable time frame of delivery. We're encouraged by seeing the tremendous growth in that service over the last couple of years. In this year, I think we have almost 300% growth in that particular service, because Canadians are becoming more demanding on how they receive items from China. They don't want to wait weeks. They would like to have those items in days.