We asked Minister Strahl this. We were recently in Ottawa and we clearly articulated what we thought he should do, and that was immediately announced, that there will be a renewable fuel standard in Canada and that we're going to move forward and the details will follow.
We also said we should grandfather anybody who wants to start building an ethanol plant today that falls into the specific criterion of producer ownership; otherwise we're going to completely miss the 2006 construction season. So that was our first position: let's start; let's move forward. That's the first part.
The second part, obviously, is that the devil is in the details. We'll argue clearly that producer ownership is a critical part of this piece. We don't for a moment suggest that 100% of all the plants in western Canada will be owned by farmers, but the American model is getting pretty close to 50% of the buildings. We think that's a reasonable target to try to hit, and we think that should be reflected in policy.
Clearly we have a strong opinion that it should be policy, and not a program, so that political interference doesn't get involved in that equation, or the presumption of political interference.