Basically, the tipping rate is paid by us, the municipality, when we dispose of either garbage or organic waste.
As Mr. Costanzo stated, when we dispose of garbage and we truck it to a landfill, it's $107 a tonne. Right now, because our facility is not built, we're disposing it to a facility that composts the material. That's roughly half the tipping rate. In terms of any organic waste that we divert from garbage, or, for that matter, recyclables from garbage, the tipping rates for those materials are a lot less than for garbage. There's a savings there.
In the case of our biofuel plant, I was attempting to explain that our business case for the biofuel plant that we forwarded to P3 Canada, after quite a bit of research, was that you can't make enough money just from converting organics to fuel to pay for the capital investment and the operation of the plant. There has to be an input. In other words, when you're accepting organic waste, you have to charge people to dump at your facility. That becomes part of the business case.
The municipality is going to have a contractual relationship with a proponent that's going to build the plant. Our solid waste division, if you will, will pay the tipping fee, but then the city, because we're a partner in the whole development of the actual plant through P3, will be receiving part of the profits of the sale of the green gas.
It would further offset our—