Talks to thrash out the largest free trade agreement in history have been officially launched at the G8 meeting in Northern Ireland. So what might a US-European Union deal achieve?
About £100bn ($157bn) to the EU, £80bn to the US, and £85bn to the rest of the world.
As UK Prime Minister David Cameron officially launched the trade talks, rattling through the potential gains, it was easy to forget how much work lies ahead.
Tearing down trade barriers between the world's two largest economies will not happen overnight, and nothing will be signed on a deal before the end of 2014.
There are two key elements - the reduction of tariffs and the harmonising of regulations.
So, unpicking the jargon and distilling the generalities, what might it really mean?
The biggest deal in history
- EU-US trade is worth around £393bn ($613bn; 455bn euros) a year
- In 2012, the US had a $107bn deficit in trade in goods with the EU
- A free-trade agreement could close that gap by increasing US exports
- It could help sluggish European economies
- Average tariff between US and EU is 3%
- Harmonising regulations could bring savings equal to ending tariffs of 10-15%, say experts










