Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thanks, folks.
I'm going to go to you, Carolyn and Hans. I'm fascinated by the upcycling. In turning waste into treasure—one man's garbage is another man's treasure—you're turning what many consider waste into reusable products, and really cool products. Congratulations on that.
It's not totally comparable, but in Dartmouth—Cole Harbour there's a company called Dan-x. Long before anyone saw an issue with or value in used light bulbs, they were taking in used light bulbs, recycling them into four or five different products and selling every one of them. The most difficult one to sell was one that they had to almost create a market for, which is the phosphor powder.
I'm a little bit all over the place with this. I'm thinking about extended producer responsibility. We think that when you buy a tire, you pay four bucks a tire up front and that covers its end of life. What about having not just a cost up front but maybe making waste available to artists or upcyclers?
You talked about the snowsuits. Maybe that producer has to come up with a plan if they have unsellable product.