I do have some of those statistics. Roughly 56% of it is pulp products and there's a whole range of pulp products. About 42% is wood products and there's a whole range of wood products. To get the value added of each product you'd have to look at it on a product-by-product basis. As you can imagine, pulp goes into everything from Kleenex, and tissues, and health care products like surgical masks—those are higher end—to cardboard and packing material. Depending on which customer is buying what, the breakdown is according to the type of pulp they're using.
On the wood side, we're constantly trying to encourage the greater use of wood. Again, it's a cultural thing. Some people don't like to use wood. China is much more of a concrete.... The hutongs and the construction in China are much more concrete-based. Japan likes to use wood. South Korea is in the middle. They like to use wood, but we want to encourage higher value and higher agricultural use of that wood.