Yes, on that point, to highlight, I am not a trade policy negotiator, but in my experience, I would say there are a few areas.
One is that, if you were to look at a comprehensive trade and economic partnership arrangement, I think it really depends on the type of partnership and the government's model in the mechanism. One step outside, I think that, yes, politically, you do need to have a dispute resolution mechanism in place; however, you can leverage other types of partnership models to have discussions to avoid these types of irritants at a very technical and scientific level. You're bringing evidence-based science and technical conversations to the mix, but you're also relying on a multilateral system to ensure that you're...you know....
What I've seen in my experience is that you have a lot of notifications to the WTO and then there are preventative measures on the margins to avoid SPS and TBT types of issues. I believe that these types of conversations and, let's say, resolutions, or at least a pathway to resolutions, can be applied through different types of economic partnership arrangements beyond having FTAs, as Mr. Dade mentioned, as a safety valve, so they should be applied.