I had another sentence or two, and they were focused on the modernizing impact on Ukraine of the beginning of the accession talks with the European Union, but also of the provisions of the modernized CUFTA.
Essentially, within probably four or five years, Ukraine will be inside the EU. It's already largely inside the single market. It will soon be within the EU's common mobile roaming zone, which means it will be a much cheaper place to have a mobile phone than Canada. It means that it will be part of our broader Euro-Atlantic system.
You need to think of CUFTA being modernized, yes, but ultimately, it may in fact be a transitional measure, because if Ukraine succeeds in acceding to the EU, it will be part of CETA—the Canada-EU trade agreement—likely by 2030. That also means that the harmonization of standards, which are very high in CETA and are being upgraded in CUFTA, will make it better and easier for Canadian companies to trade goods and services that are interoperable with Ukraine, because they're designed to be interoperable with the EU. Ukraine's EU accession also makes it an easier market to work with for Canadian companies.