There's no doubt that Europe is far more ambitious than Canada is in creating incentives and infrastructure for green energy, as are, for that matter, China and certainly the U.S. So if you have a forest mill, a lumber mill or a pulp and paper mill in the U.S., in Europe, or in many other places in the world, the incentives structure for transformation to green energy is considerably more generous than it is in Canada.
I have to acknowledge that the government did come up with the $1 billion green transformation program, and though it was less than what we could have gotten in the U.S., it was more intelligently designed, so we actually got more bang for the buck. But overall, if there's one thing that would benefit Canada's forest industry, it's incentives for transformation to green energy.
Take, for example, the situation in Quebec, where there is huge dependence on fossil fuels. That's a tremendous cost factor. Switching to biofuels would reduce the cost, increase the jobs, and increase the green performance. It is similar out west, and that's why the re-profiling of that $500 million, which is currently limited to next-generation biofuels, into a more general bio-energy could, at no cost to the government and just with smarter use of existing money, make a very large difference.