Before the agreement there were not comprehensive disciplines on subsidies. With the fisheries subsidies agreement, we actually have enforceable rules that regulate this area, and I won't go through the three pillars that we already talked about before on the agreement.
Before, we had no predictability and no enforceability. Now we have actually put fences around the subsidies in those three areas that we've already discussed.
The question of indigenous rights for Canada is an interesting question, and I'm going to take too long and I'm happy to come back to it. The question of indigenous rights in an organization like the WTO is quite complex, because what the term “indigenous peoples” means in countries around the world is different from what it means in Canada or even in North America.
For Canada, when we were negotiating the fisheries subsidies agreement, we were, as I said, very intentional about making sure that we negotiated something that would allow us to balance this need to protect the ability of our fishers to fish and to export on the one hand, and on the other hand to protect our environment.