For the work we're currently doing, we have been supported by federal, provincial, Canadian philanthropic, and private philanthropic endeavours, so I personally have not looked at that in any depth. We have no borrowing costs at all for our first endeavour. Indeed, the land was donated to us by the 'Namgis nation, which comes back to David's earlier point that the land in rural areas is substantively cheaper than the costs that were calculated in DFO.
Our project is a project in which we're doing open transparency so that we can really nail down the true costs of getting down to business in this manner. When we're done, we'll be able to say that you need $6 million, $7 million, $10 million, or $15 million. We'll have an accurate number for which the true depreciation costs can then be calculated with some level of certainty, rather than guessing at what the initial number is. Because if you put $22 million in and depreciate it, you end up in a non-feasible position, but if you put in $12 million and depreciate it, you do.... Well, both of those were estimates based on work. As our projects are going forward, we will try to nail economic security down. That's the purpose of our project.