We were given the figure of over $300 million by the Canadian Association of Research Libraries. It involves spending by libraries in universities across Canada. Of that $300 million, my understanding is that $160 million, approximately, is for licensing digital resources--for example, the digital versions of academic journals.
There are various.... For example, there's the Canadian Research Knowledge Network, which was set up by a consortium of, I believe, about 68 universities. That body negotiates licensing agreements directly with academic publishers for use by the universities in that consortium of digital versions of those journals. Similarly, the regional university library consortia across the country, such as the Ontario Council of University Libraries, together with their counterparts in the west, the east, and in Quebec, all negotiate similar licensing arrangements.
So a significant portion of what's happening is that universities have transitioned towards the use of digital resources and away from photocopying. For that reason, when people talk about the threat to the licensing revenues, for example, of Access Copyright or Copibec, the threat does not come from Bill C-32. The threat comes because in the digital environment those who are offering licences for the digital works are often bypassing these collectives and dealing directly with institutions to negotiate new agreements.
As I said, of the $300 million, about $160 million is licensing of that kind. I don't have a breakdown on the rest of this money.