The agreement and the rights and obligations have been agreed to. That has been concluded, but of course anything is still possible at the administrative level after the agreement has been concluded. There is always a possibility for both sides to agree to further accommodations in terms of timing or enforcement.
In contrast to what we see, for example, in the intellectual property rights space, for certain provisions in the agreement itself, there are transition periods provided for two and a half years or four and a half years for certain changes. We don't have that in the dairy provisions on the export charges, but that doesn't necessarily mean those accommodations can't still be arrived at country to country at the political level between negotiators and the political decision-makers. I'm not saying that would be easy of course. None of the contexts of these negotiations, I imagine, were easy, but it is a possibility.