On the biofuels issue, the investments that have been made into that industry in Canada I think accomplished what the industry wanted. It had a rise on the price of the input costs going in, which to a certain degree was fine.
One of the arguments I would make is that if the U.S. wants to support a strategy of biofuels to reduce its dependency on Mideast oil, then, really, Canada could benefit from that without putting up a single ethanol plant, in that once the U.S. has such a huge demand for ethanol and they have issues of their own capabilities to produce the crop, Canada can ship their corn to the U.S. and it can be made into ethanol there. You're already seeing some of that trend, as so many ethanol plants are popping up in the midwest United States. Iowa is moving from a net exporter of corn to a net importer of corn. So I don't think the Canadian farmer would suffer from lower corn prices if corn prices are being driven off the Chicago Board of Trade price.
What we should focus on, though, is that Canada has a tremendous amount of biomass that can be made into ethanol-based products. We should use those biomass products, for which we have an unquenchable source of supply. We are not anywhere close--in fact, I think Canada's corn production numbers are less than the State of Nebraska, so if we want to become a major player in corn-produced ethanol, I think we had better start moving our country to an area that can grow more corn. I think we need to use the materials that are here.
The other fallacy that the feed industry was presented with was that, oh, the tremendous amount of byproducts that will come out of the ethanol industry will become a cheap source of ingredients to fatten cattle, fatten hogs, grow chickens. The problem is that there is a limitation to how much of that byproduct can be fed to any particular livestock.
You can feed high levels of corn to a chicken and a hog. You can feed only low levels of DDGs, or distiller-dried grains, to those same livestock. So to prevent boredom of the science behind some of this stuff, perhaps out of the biomass—and I don't know enough of the ethanol industry—if we could create a feed source out of something that right now has no value to the agriculture industry, if out of that ethanol plant would come a byproduct that the agriculture industry could use where now it can't, I think that would be a much more meaningful process for us.