Prior to leaving the EU, the U.K. had access to the CETA quota, which was negotiated as part of the overall agreement when they were members of the EU. That was 16,000 tonnes of cheese and 1,700 tonnes of industrial cheese. Having left the EU, they were no longer entitled to that access. We suggested to them that they approach the EU about that. They did, and the EU said, “You are not entitled to this. You're not an EU member anymore.”
That leaves them with access to our WTO quota. Our WTO quota is for cheeses of all types. It's 20,412 tonnes. That WTO quota is divided into two pools. One pool is for EU members. It's about 70% of that total—approximately 14,250 tonnes. Given that the U.K. is no longer a member of that, in theory they should no longer be entitled to it. However, as part of the trade continuity agreement negotiations, we allowed them to continue to access that pool while we are in discussions over a bilateral agreement.
As of today, they have the ability to access that part of the pool—approximately 14,270 tonnes.