The Lung Association has been working on wood stoves for the past 10 years. We've been trying to get that in the Hazardous Products Act. Under CEPA, all the provinces and territories want regulations in relation to wood stoves, to get an EPA type approved that would have the double chamber that would reduce the amount of pollution coming out of it. We're hopeful that as CEPA goes through, that will be there.
There's another introduction that has come in, called Wood Doctors. These are large wood-burning types of stoves where it's straight pipe and you can get whole logs that will just dump into them. That means that the air pollutants going into the atmosphere are pure, just like burning down a forest. It's just pure pollutants that are going out. So that has to be addressed.
In relation to the pellet stoves, certainly the pellet stoves have an advantage over the others. But it has to be combined with putting the regulation in, and then I always have to reaffirm that one of the things we're not good at as a government is coming out with communications, education, and awareness to make sure that these things are going to tie in the partnerships.