Thank you very much indeed for the question.
I think that what we can do, and what we have yet to do in a really meaningful way, is ensure that plurilateral trade agreements have very meaningful commitments to human rights due diligence.
I'll give you an example. Right now, the CPTPP does contain quite extensive provisions around labour. It has quite high labour standards, but in practice, they don't mean very much because you can more or less join that agreement if the members say you can. The assumption had always been that China would never be able to join the CPTPP. Their labour standards are way too low. The reality is realpolitik. They'll be able to join if the members say they can.
I think that ensuring that there are non-negotiable principles around shared values, human rights and due diligence in supply chains would be a very good start.
There's much more that we can do. I think there should be a coordinated reduction of dependency upon China, not just unilaterally—not just Canada saying that it's too dependent. We need democratic nations to come together and say, we have this common problem, so let's find a common solution. If it requires us to pool our resources in order to seed alternative markets, for example, let's do that. It's going to be much easier dealt with together than on our own.