Yes. Certainly the negotiations that we're currently conducting with the U.K., as I mentioned, are on a transitional agreement that we can reach, which would try to preserve as many of the elements of CETA as we can as the U.K. moves out of the EU and into a relationship where it's no longer part of the EU.
We do have discussions with the U.K. right now. We're in the final stages of reaching, hopefully, a transitional trade agreement. Most of the issues we're talking about relate to goods market access, because that's one issue where we can't simply leave what we had in place with the EU under CETA and replicate it entirely in the U.K.-Canada context. You can do that on rules-related issues, but you can't do it when you start to talk about numbers. We've been doing that, and that's been much of the focus.
We also have had some challenges in trying to resolve issues related to temporary entry of business people for business purposes. That was part of the commitment under CETA. It's been particularly difficult with the U.K., as it was in CETA, but that's carried over to these transition discussions as well. We really only have a fairly small handful of issues left to resolve, and then I think we can reach agreement on a transitional arrangement, which will then allow CETA to continue after the U.K. finally does leave the EU at the end of the year. That will give us the opportunity to negotiate a full free trade agreement with the U.K., following that.
In the meantime—