At the Ethanol Development Council, we're well aware of the Lanigan plant and the uniqueness of that plant. We have been told for some time about this economies of scale debate and how you can't build a plant of that size and be profitable. We weren't sure of that, so we commissioned an engineering team using some of the best knowledge in North America. This is not a public document yet, but this is the result of that effort. Clearly, this particular plant and this particular model of a 20-million-litre ethanol plant producing static 20,000 head at one time--so it produces about 40,000 head a year--is about a $45 million company; it has a payback of about 5.7 years, using 70ยข as a price point for ethanol. By the way, it's trading at $1.10 Canadian today, also owning half of the livestock in the pen. That's a tremendous model; that's part of the piece.
The other part of the piece is just dry distillers grain. There are some unique things going on at our university, taking dry distillers grain, mixing it with a by-product from biodiesel, which is glycerine, and opening a brand new market in the hog industry. You haven't seen the report yet because it has to be peer reviewed because it's so bold, but there are some great things going on with dry distillers grain.