Absolutely the tariff negotiations, by definition, have to deal with individual products. Again, we're talking about the establishment of commitments in a new treaty for wheat or pork or whatever product, as compared to an action—a law, a regulation, a decision—that violates an existing commitment. That is what we were dealing with in this case.
The rules of commerce between Canada and the EU, the very broad foundation of that is the WTO. That is the mechanism, by far the most appropriate and effective mechanism, for us to get them to change what they're doing because they're offside.