Thank you for the question.
We can process all the SRM; we can't process all the SRM from the whole province in one facility.
Certainly the strategy is that the SRM facility, which we would build in conjunction with Ranchers Meat, would be in partnership with Ranchers Meat, the province, the federal government, and the producers, so that we'd also be able to take in dead stock and so on from producers at lower or no cost, if we can get some funding there.
But certainly, strategically placed, SRM-handling facilities that use the thermal hydrolysis system could be spotted all over Alberta, which would take care of all the SRM material. There would not be any need for rendering or landfilling especially, and as I say, you would end up with a value-added product.
That product can be further researched and fractionized down to where you can start looking at thinks like pharmaceutical products from animal waste. Wouldn't that be something?