On aboriginal employees, even more interestingly, we do business with about 1,600 aboriginal-owned businesses. So in addition to them being a large part of our labour force, there's a lot of business-to-business activity, and it's very successful.
The industry is going to be different. There will definitely be fewer and more efficient plants. There will be small and medium-sized brilliant niche players, and there should be some very large economies-of-scale players. But we will not succeed by trying to hang on to the status quo. We have to go through the adaptation process, which is why we said don't subsidize; don't get in the way. When the industry is trying to go through a transformation, painful though it is, let us do that, but help with the investment and innovation.
We're talking about switching to biomass. The industry is now powered 60% by renewable biomass. The government can help speed the transformation there. New products, processes, and markets—all of that sort of work is supported by SR and ED tax credits that are not accessible to us, not that I want to beat that horse a little bit.
Thank you.