I can tell you that the CETA outcome is very much different from other approaches we have followed in the past. There will be no ability to overturn environmental decisions or restrict governments from regulating in the interests of environment, or anything along those lines, whether it's social services, health services, or others.
I can also tell you that under CETA, the investor-state dispute settlement will be much more transparent. We will have open hearings. Anybody that has an interest can go to those kinds of proceedings. I think we have a number of other elements there, too, in terms of not allowing frivolous claims to proceed, which we have seen in the past, sometimes successfully. We've introduced a number of additional elements.
There's one that's probably most fundamental. One of the debates we had with the Europeans, having experienced NAFTA over the years in chapter 11, is that we wanted to have a very strong representation, a very strong protection, on the right to regulate, giving and defending governments' ability to regulate. That's in the text.