Thanks.
Mr. Wong, on a bit of a personal note, I was on a Canada 150 ship this summer and did the leg from Maine to Iqaluit. I spent some time in Iqaluit this summer and with a gentleman whom you would know, Natan Obed. It was a pretty wonderful trip.
In a previous life as a fisheries biologist, I did some early work on the Sylvia Grinnell. I've had the pleasure of being in Iqaluit from time to time.
Mr. Fournier, I would assume that in the work you've done in the north, you've worked below the treeline as well as above it. I'd like to focus in on wood both as a building material and a fuel source. In terms of log homes, I happen to live in a log house.
What is holding back local people from being trained and employed in building log homes in their communities below the treeline and then, subsequently, heating those homes with wood? We do have a surplus of wood in this country since the paper industry has shrunk dramatically.
Could you talk a bit about the potential role that wood from a local source could play, both as a building material and a fuel?