Last time I heard, it sounded as if they were considering international offsets. I suggest that you put that to the Minister of the Environment rather than to the forest industry.
In terms of the role of international credits, I think it's worth noting that 20% of greenhouse gases come from deforestation. One of the brilliant things people are looking at, going into Copenhagen, is actually having a system whereby areas that would have been deforested or could be reforested get credit from industrialized countries for storing the carbon. Certainly if that's part of the scheme, our experience is that it would be very helpful.
I'll just throw in something extra. There's something we could do in Canada that would have an international impact. About 10% of the global supply of wood and paper comes from illegal logs. Our experience with illegal loggers is that they don't sneak back at night and replant trees, so it is a big contributor to deforestation. It reduces the economics for the responsible players globally. If we had a more robust policy in Canada to trace all fibre back to legal sources, that would also help offset what's happening internationally.