I agree with what's been said so far. I think Canada's commitments with respect to supply-managed products, including dairy products under the CPTPP, is well known. Those commitments were made with an expectation that that market access would be utilized by our trading partners that are in the CPTPP, as was described previously, owing in part to the fact that the United States has not ultimately joined that agreement.
There are dairy products for which the utilization rate of the TRQ is not being fully utilized right now. The expectation was that that volume would be used, and the approach that the government took in its discussions on compensation with the dairy sector assumed full utilization of the commitments that were made in the CPTPP.
While the terms of the U.K. accession would need to be determined with the U.K. and the other CPTPP members, were they to take some portion of that dairy access that Canada provided, that would not fundamentally change the outcome that Canada anticipated when it concluded the CPTPP negotiations.