With the Middle Bay project, SDTC has contributed or has committed $5.7 million on a $17 million project. Primarily, the money has come from two sources: a company called AgriMarine, which is the one that has the intellectual property on the project and the one responsible for marketing it; and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, which is interested in ensuring that the information coming out of the project can be made public and that people can learn from it. Then there were smaller contributions from the provincial government as well.
On the 'Namgis project, an $11-million project, there's $2.4 million from SDTC. The balance is coming from several sources. There are contributions from Tides Canada, some from DFO, and a little bit from Western Economic Diversification and Northern Affairs. Then there's the in-kind contributions from the first nation itself.
We have parameters around what we can or cannot fund. SDTC can contribute up to 50% of any project. Overall on the portfolio of 220 projects, we have to keep it under 33%, so if somebody gets 50%, somebody else is going to get an awful lot less. We try to make sure that the ones that are capable of doing it take some of the burden.
When you take SDTC plus any other government funding, be it federal, provincial, or municipal, it cannot exceed 75%. There has to be a minimum of 25% coming from industry.