That's excellent. Thank you very much, and thank you to all the witnesses who have presented today, Dan, Mike and Dave.
I'm going to ask a few of my questions to the Canola Growers, because Regina has had a lot of influx of canola-crushing plants and a lot of good announcements lately, about 1.2 billion dollars' worth, so we are looking forward to being, as I said, the canola-crushing capital of Canada.
A question I'd like to walk through is that I don't think some of our colleagues realize how big these grain dryers are. Talking about biomass, I take Mr. MacGregor's point, but also then you don't calculate the machinery it takes to collect the biomass that's on the field and then transport that biomass to where the grain is actually located. These farms in western Canada aren't 1,000 and 2,000 acres. There are 30,000-acre and 40,000-acre farms, and they're trucking this product a long way.
As Mike said, you have the natural gas brought to the bins to be more innovative and to be more environmentally friendly.
Mike, I'd really just like you to walk us through the size of the bins, of these bushels that are being dried, and the size of the grain dryers. The fact is that they're not easily movable. You can't just decide one day you're going to pick up a 20,000-bushel bin and move it to a field closer to you.
Just walk us through a bit of how some of that infrastructure is permanent and not easily movable.