That was something that Pulse Canada along with a number of our other counterparts at ag commodity associations in Canada supported very much. As I mentioned, it's very important that, in addition to having these mechanisms within trade agreements, we have a sustained and long-term presence and relationship-building initiatives by both industry and government in the regions that we trade with.
We know that while some of the barriers we face are put in place deliberately for protectionist reasons, many of these barriers are also often due to the importing country's lack of resources, time or expertise to implement proper risk assessment systems for incoming commodities. We know that, specifically in the Indo-Pacific, many of these economies could benefit from regulatory and technical capacity-building work. We hope to see a major focus on that through this office. We're very happy to see this as a first step towards that.