Yes. Ukraine has signed the first part of an EU association agreement, the political part. After the presidential elections probably in June, they will sign the economic part of it, which is a free trade agreement, also the substantial assistance agreement. Membership would come in 10 years or so, if Ukraine is successful. This is not the [Inaudible—Editor] process.
Therefore, what is in this association agreement, which is a big thing of 1,200 pages, is a big list of reforms that Ukraine will have to undertake, hundreds of reform laws, but the environment is, by and large, not there because the environmental regulations, as you mentioned, in the European Union are very expensive. The European Union has sensibly understood that this would not be right to impose now. This is much more about market, rule of law, and deregulation.
The electricity sector is essentially dominated by four different Ukrainian business groups. The nuclear energy is still state-owned, while other power stations, which are gas and coal heated, are privatized. As part of this gas reform, Ukraine is increasing...I think it's a 70% price increase from July 1. It's the same problem here with the gas price. That is far too low because it's related to the gas price, even if there are some other energy sources, as Mr. Dem'ianiuk mentioned. Ukraine actually exports electricity to Hungary. So it's not dependent on any import of electricity at all from Russia.