There are a number of opportunities. The low-hanging fruit in the forest industry is energy. If we bring trees from the forest, then we convert them into lumber and into pulp and paper products. From that there's a waste. It's usually the bark, the outside of the tree. Traditionally, in certain industries, such as the craft pulp industry, we burn that for our own internal power. We have been green for a long time in the sense that most craft mills are not only energy neutral, but we sell power back into the grid. There are opportunities to enhance that based on your fibre supply and your process.
There are opportunities in the biofuel sector where the biomass can be converted into liquid biofuels, such as ethanol and jet fuel. The technology exists. It's the policy infrastructure that holds it back.
I should also mention that on the energy side, complementary to the wind and solar folks, it's not a competition out there for what's the best technology or setting the right suite of sources out there. Biomass offsets the intermittency of wind and solar. Biomass, in Alberta, could make up 10% of the grid. It's not going to replace all of the coal, but it's another piece of the puzzle that goes to reduce our GHG emissions.