You're right. With Minister Easter previously, Minister Strahl, and others, our particular group is supplying a tremendous amount of information regarding the American model. Some of the very specific programs in the American model have been very successful. With all due respect to the elected officials and the bureaucracy, I think they've done a good job of looking at it.
There's also been an interesting debate about states, what role states have played in the U.S. market and how proactive they have been. There was a comment made on what has happened provincially in Canada in regard to biodiesel, as an example.
There is an interesting anomaly in the states. Montana probably has the most aggressive ethanol program of all of the United States, and yet there is not one ethanol plant in Montana. Correspondingly, the state that probably has the leanest program is South Dakota. The last time I checked, they were the third largest producers of ethanol in the United States.
There's a little mission over there to indicate that it has always been federally driven in the U.S. The State of Minnesota was the first to mandate it, but other things related to MTBE banning and so on have really been the catalyst for the growth of that particular industry.