Thank you. On the first question, biology is a knowledge base, a broad knowledge base in a modern context—generally speaking, molecular biology—that underlies development of products in those seemingly almost unrelated sectors. When you talk biofuels, there's a bio component, right? When we talk about alternative materials for Mercedes fenders, that actually is a biological product. Everybody understands the health one, and that's really our history as a sector within the country, and it continues strongly.
So it is just that: the science part is biologically driven, molecularly driven, biochemically driven science that underlies, no matter where that diversity of application happens, and Canada is active in all those sectors I've mentioned. What's on your plate? What's in your car? What is the pill you take in order to stay healthy? We've made major, major contributions in the world to that. The newer biotechnology, from a time perspective, is really the non-health side of biotechnology. Canada is actively engaged, broadly speaking, in having products that are ready to go into the market, or that are early in the market, or that will come into the market in the future.
That's where the threat lies. In the whole world there is a greening going on, as we know and we all support for various reasons, and it is generally accepted in the world that a bio-based economy—that means a knowledge-based economy, not just growing more corn to sell off as a feedstock—is going to be the hallmark of an economically successful country in the future.