Thank you for that question.
I don't know the answer.
Canadian trade agreements usually don't include a lot on energy—energy policy and energy security—outside of, say, the North American context, where there's a more integrated energy market. Why they wouldn't talk about it specifically....
The point we raised here is that the investor-state dispute settlement process in the investment chapter may actually end up frustrating Ukraine's ultimate decision on where it wants to go to secure its energy independence. Does it want to double down on oil and gas fossil-fuel development, for example, or perhaps further roll out more renewables in the country? That's another reason we recommend taking the ISDS out. It's only going to potentially frustrate Ukraine's ultimate decisions at that point.