There are a couple of different things that come to mind there. First, of course, a lot of this is going to be done, if at all, at a multilateral level. The question is what leverage we have in a bilateral negotiation.
One big challenge, I think, in the context of distortive industrial subsidies, is transparency. It's hard to discipline something if you don't actually know what it is. That's something that I think we can take on in a bilateral context.
The other thing linked to this is what it is we want to do when it comes to looking at national security interests. When we're talking about a domestic steel industry, what level of steel industry is important to maintain for our own domestic industrial base?
The third and final point is about reciprocal procurement market access. In trade agreements, we're giving and getting at the same time, so we want to make sure there's a balance of concessions that are made in the procurement chapter. Of course, as you would know for the infrastructure sector, a lot of steel gets used.