The previous foreign investment promotion and protection agreement, FIPA, with Ukraine was one of our older-generation agreements, so almost 30 years later, we've applied our new FIPA model, which came into effect a few years ago. In this new FIPA model, it includes new drafting to ensure that parties are able to maintain the right to regulate and provide the policy flexibility in areas such as environment, culture, indigenous, gender and cultural diversities.
It also includes a more updated, modernized dispute settlement system, as my colleague was addressing earlier. One of the important updates is that it's not encouraging that parties or investors in ISDS cases or state-to-state cases rush to launching disputes. It provides strength and alternatives, options to consider to avoid arbitration. That would be the key: to allow the parties to sit down with the investor to discuss the injury that they claim to have faced and find a way forward without going forward, ultimately, to litigation.
The last point I would say is that, under the modernized ISDS provisions, we also streamline the litigation procedures and make them more accessible to our SMEs, which found themselves outside of being able to take advantage of disputes because they just simply weren't funded to pay for lawyers and whatnot. It's more inclusive in that regard.