Thank you for the question, Madam Chair.
We definitely see the transitional trade agreement as an interim agreement, a first step.
We indicated early on that replicating the CETA is what we have available to us at this time. In order to ensure that continuity for businesses—Canadian businesses, exporters and producers—we wanted to ensure that continuity was in place.
We identified fairly early on that we would like to launch a bilateral agreement that best reflects the trade and the relationship between Canada and the United Kingdom. Part and parcel of our negotiations with the United Kingdom right now is how to best move forward with that.
When Secretary of State Truss and Minister Ng spoke in August, there was a clear commitment by both ministers to launch a bilateral negotiation once we completed the work on the transitional trade agreement. We expect to do that sometime next year. Of course, in advance of that we would do a full-scale consultation with all interested stakeholders.
It is very much the case that the transitional trade agreement is an interim step, from our perspective. Then we would have a full-scale bilateral agreement in place in the coming [Inaudible—Editor] launch the negotiations next year and then have it in place within a few years after that.