Since my light is on, I'll try to answer.
I'd just like to touch on the biofuel question for a minute. Our organization was quite adamant right from the very beginning as far as Canada getting involved with producers in biofuel plants, and in particular in Saskatchewan it would be ethanol plants. We have some very good models for integrated facilities in Saskatchewan, one of them being Pound-Maker at Lanigan, which is not far from Saskatoon. We really promoted that farmers should become involved with this.
Canada, through Agriculture and the Department of the Environment, did its strategy, and to some degree it was successful. It was successful in promoting this. A lot of this, we believe, has been solely driven by politics in the U.S. We realize some subsidies were put in place, and we're basically not able to compete against those subsidies in this country, as you are aware. We know it's driving the fertilizer prices to some extent because of sheer demand, specifically in corn. As you are aware, corn uses a tremendous volume of nitrogen to grow a crop.
Although it seems positive, we realize there are repercussions in the livestock industry because of high feed costs for animal nutrition and all those things. The spinoff is evident there. We've always promoted integrated facilities where producers, and hopefully farmers, can build their own facilities attached to feedlots, so we see the benefit there as well for the livestock industry.