Absolutely, we have encouraged the committee to do a competitiveness study of Canada's recent free trade agreements, namely the CETA and the CPTPP, in large part to identify opportunities where we're not maximizing the agreement, and certainly the non-tariff barriers with respect to the CETA is a key piece of that.
We would really encourage Parliament as a whole, but the committee, to start the study to review where free trade agreements are not being honoured by trading partners. This is especially important if our agri-food sector is to continue to feed Canadians here, but also families around the world as well, and deliver on growth opportunities across the country. That's non-tariff barriers in the CETA context with respect to the EU, but perhaps I can take this opportunity to also flag the fact that the EU is not the only country that is using non-tariff barriers to block access of agri-food exports, agri-food trade. With Peru, Colombia, Vietnam and a number of countries around the world, there isn't a week that goes by where our members are not faced with non-tariff barriers. This is really a creeping problem.