That was an example. I'm not too sure how Canada might want to address it. It was a particular response, giving tax exemptions to built biofuel fuelling stations and that kind of thing. Those are all incentives to facilitate the flow of productivity. There was a roadblock there. There weren't enough fuelling stations, so they gave an incentive to build them. If that happens here, certainly a partnership needs to be developed all through the chain, whether it is municipal, provincial, and federal governments or large companies, small companies, and that kind of thing.
To address your first comment on the small companies, that is an issue. The U.S. Energy Policy Act of 2005 has a specific line in one of the sections stating that one of the goals is to ensure small feedstock producers and small rural businesses are full participants in the development of the biofuel industry. It's explicit within their policy, language, and legislation. They have specific programs for extra fuel tax incentives, as well as federal grants and loan guarantees for small organizations, small farm groups, and small rural communities to invest and build with.
They've created with this energy act all the different programs and put together an investment in environment that is really solid. Venture capitalists or rural communities that want to invest feel confidence that there are going to be the proper incentives and the ability for them to be successful.
Right now it's a patchwork; no one really knows what's going on. They feel afraid to invest those dollars. Banks and venture capitalists aren't quite sure where and how and if it will be successful. We need to create that investment atmosphere.