It's interesting to understand what Mr. Steckle said earlier, that this is going to cost the country money versus the Americans because we're not harmonized. Everybody understands that. We're dealing with it. The issue now is that because we're so close to the deadline, it's going to cost us possibly a whole lot more. What's going to happen is that we can't segregate in time, and so we can't save the so-called “good” raw material to make into finished products that go to Kathleen. We have to possibly throw it all into the “bad” stuff. We can do that, no problem. That can happen, it's just that the economics are very stringent.
The only other issue, when we're not 100% sure we can execute that, is whether we can find landfills to take that material. As we've said, if we take it all to Dundas and it's all bad stuff except the tallow, then we've got thousands of tonnes each week of rendered meat and bonemeal that can't be sold and that has to go somewhere. It has an economic cost to the industry, which is what these gentlemen were talking about. But also, it's one thing if you can execute it, but can you take it somewhere? I don't think we have that nailed yet.