Municipalities have very clear rules to follow. They must respect the hierarchy of the 3R-RD principle, a principle that they need to implement. Municipalities thus cannot decide to simply do as they please, which is a very good thing. For our part, we wholeheartedly agree with these principles.
When people in communities speak to me about their concerns in this regard, I tell them that we have a certain flexibility. It is possible that in 20 years, a number of new technologies will allow us to increase recycling even more and reduce the quantity of matter in our processing plants. We can help a good many sectors, such as the commercial and industrial sectors, along with those sectors that deal with construction lumber waste and plastics in cars, even waste from car shredding. Why not? There's also forestry or agricultural waste in that region. Obviously, in that last case, we have to consider what needs to stay on the soil to fertilize it.
So there's great flexibility and a huge variety of waste matter that we can use in our process. We can also use, as a complement, resources found in the region. When we make investments today and for the long term, we always take into account that people will eventually be recycling even more than today.