I can start, and I'll ask Janelle to weigh in at a more detailed level.
Farmers don't necessarily decide where their products end up. It's a bulk handling system. About 20 million tonnes get rolled up. When there isn't trade volatility, their prices tend to be higher, and they don't ever have issues selling their products domestically, and then they get shipped out.
I'll ask Janelle to speak to the specifics of the region, but I think the one opportunity we do have when we establish a relationship to look at a free trade agreement is to use language included in CUSMA and CPTPP—progressive language around science-based equivalency and around how we treat biotechnology and adjudicate scientific disagreements in a transparent and expeditious way. There's a lot of opportunity if we adopt the progressive language in CPTPP and CUSMA, and, as my colleague Fawn said, veer away from language like that in CETA, which is not nearly as progressive.
I'll ask Janelle to weigh in on a more detailed level.