The issue for us is that we can continue to make process changes at the margin, and we will do better than we are currently doing.
As an example of big technological change, there's the development of hydromet for nickel recovery, which is at a pilot plan stage in Newfoundland, at a cost of $250 million, and moving to a $1.1 billion full-scale plant. The technology will take five years to prove once that gets built. Then it will take considerable time to actually get implanted anywhere else in the industry.
That's only one of our product lines. So some of these things are well beyond the 2010 to 2015 period, and that's where government assistance is needed.
I'm not sure that government assistance is needed there. Where it is needed is when you get into pre-competitive areas, such as carbon sequestration, where no individual company can justify the total carriage of that research, because it can't capture the benefits. This is where you need partnerships. Those are longer-term solutions that will have a transforming effect on the end result.