The problem is timing and applications, and we've been talking both to the federal and provincial governments. The deadline is set. It does take eight to ten months to a year to build a facility. We've known about this for quite a number of months now. We've been chasing our good people in government, but you can see there's a level of frustration amongst producers and producer-owned plants that we have this challenge.
Methane production from protein, when you put it in these biodigesters, is much better than manure. In fact, if you add up to 23% of protein from a packing plant into a biodigester, you get a surge of methane because the little archaea really like this product. So instead of landfilling that and trying then to capture the methane, which is a greenhouse gas, you immediately capture it all and produce electricity and all the other things that come with that.
The frustration is timing. We need to get started with this and hope we have enough money. The problem often is that you just get enough money from these programs to be dangerous. You can't get enough to actually build it and operate, and that's the frustration that a lot of the greenfield start-up projects tend to suffer.