Let me reread...for example, I'll use Alberta, which is dealing with the largest amount: “The independent renderer operating in these provinces expects to receive and process the SRM material from the two packer renderers.” So West Coast Reduction, which has a rendering plant, will build another line. But as they've said, and this is from their notes to me, “Separation and construction of a separate processing line remains dependent on capital funding assistance being made available to the company.”
So they are not going forward. They've done the engineering, they're getting ready, but this a substantial capital investment. They aren't going to do that unless they have that capital funding. For them to be ready, I don't think it's realistic to build another line that quickly.
I said in Ontario, Atwood is moving ahead at certain levels, but they're stopping because they're not going to handle the rest of it. From the standpoint of things like disposal, we've definitely been in touch with a variety of landfills, but that takes time. Some we haven't got approval for, and some will take the rendered product as opposed to the raw product. The raw product is the guts and the bones, pretty messy stuff. The rendered product is the powdered material, a little easier to take to a landfill.
The other concern is, even if you had the approval to take the raw material to the landfill, how quickly would somebody in that jurisdiction say they don't want this stuff anymore, once they get a little taste of that material coming into their jurisdiction?
Does that make sense?