No. A number of years ago our acreage would have been 50,000 acres. We are always in a rotation. We're not perpetually double-cropping tobacco. This year's production represents approximately 25,000 acres, so many of those acres have already either gone into cover cropping or other crops.
There has been a great deal of research already into these alternative cropping areas. There have been departments within the provincial government that have been working on this for 25 years. Some of our farmers will stay in farming after an exit program into some other area of farming. Some, we expect, will just do well to pay off their debt and leave farming completely—go through retraining, start a business, get an off-farm job.
We also believe that some of the most fragile and sensitive lands ought to be retired from farming through reforestation.
We hope that some of the current innovative ideas, such as biomass production for ethanol feed stocks, may become viable.
I think there is a multitude of potential solutions. I don't see one singular quick fix.
I'm sorry, I forget the second part of your question.