I just wanted to add to what Carlo said. One of the lessons we learned from the Australia and China FTA is, of course, that it's not one of the most comprehensive agreements we have seen, but the Australians have been telling us that having some role is better than having no role. It has been effective, but of course it doesn't address everything.
What we see instead, because it doesn't address everything, is association-to-association MOUs. It is engagement at every level, not just between federal and provincial but also between associations, like the Australian meat association collaborative mechanism with the Chinese meat association.
What we see is that, when you have this kind of decentralization integration, and when there is a political dispute at the political level and there is a political ban at the federal level, it becomes a little bit more difficult to impact some of these industries that are so integrated with the Chinese market. Of course, the government has to take that in mind when they are doing this kind of negotiation, so we find that to be quite effective.