I think the one thing we want to state clearly is that we feel the investment that's gone into ethanol to this point has not been thrown away. It accomplished what we had wanted it to accomplish, which was to raise the value of some of the products our Canadian farmers sell.
The halfway solution: I think a wait-and-see approach can be done. The technology does have to catch up. Certainly it even needed to catch up to corn production. I don't know if you're aware of some of the statistics, but today we produce far more ethanol from a bushel of corn than we did when the first plant opened in the United States. Technology quickly catches up. I believe that will also continue in other sources of biofuel materials.
I think the crux of all the input cost issues comes down to a lot of what Darrin has been talking about, which is simply a competition. Farmers need to be able to have as many people buying their products as possible, which certainly the ethanol program did. It created another market for a farmer to sell his corn. On the flip side, though, that farmer needs to have the same opportunity to buy his products in the competitive market, and if that playing field is fair, everything is good.