Thank you very much for the question.
Of course, our trade commissioners in the field are always working with our farmers and producers to help them find opportunities, to diversify those opportunities, to ensure that they have good, solid partnerships in place and to help them solve problems when problems arise, including informing our trade policy colleagues when certain barriers come up and asking them to work very closely and quickly with our colleagues at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada to try to resolve them in a longer term.
Short-term, of course, we are always there to help with problem-solving. I can speak to personal experience. When I was posted in India, we had occasional difficulty getting product through or off the dock. We engage on the ground with the local governments and try to work through these things using science-based evidence to talk about those kinds of market access issues.
I would defer to my colleague, if she has anything to add from a trade policy and negotiation standpoint.