In answer to your question, during the negotiations on and the investigation into the logistics of SRM disposal, and before the rules were even finalized, a large amount of work did go into regional workshops in each province to look at alternative sources and disposal issues, in the realization that logistics are a major factor in disposing of SRM.
Cogeneration was certainly explored. I will turn it over to André in a minute because he will give you the actual numbers. But the $80 million, plus the provincial money that was given out to the provinces, was for those kinds of opportunities. It was up to the provinces to determine whether those kinds of operations such as incineration, cogeneration, and even combinations with the biosolid issue and so on, would work.
I don't know precisely what the Ontario provincial government, in consultation with their industry, has come up with. But as far as I can determine, they will have looked at that, and if they have not done anything along those lines, it would probably be because it's not considered cost-effective.