My last comment on this is that it's important to realize the two streams coming out of the rendering process. Go back to the process, which is that the raw material goes in, water is evaporated off, and two usable streams come out--one is the tallow and the fats. The tallow and the fats actually are either going into commercial use for chemicals, feed fat, or actually being used in biodiesel in Montreal. The proteins aren't appropriate for biodiesel; they don't go into that. The issue with that is whether they can be used for things like energy, or in your boilers or whatever. That will be investigated. It's not commercially viable anywhere that we're aware of now.
I think the issue, as I said before, is that we have weeks and we have to deal with it on a base case, and that is to make this stuff go away as quickly as possible, as economically as possible. Then over the course of time, as Dennis said--and Brad, I think--can we close the gap and get some commercially viable things on the protein side? We hope so.