We have a lot of industry-led initiatives, whether they be at a company level.... A lot of the drivers for change we've seen have been coming from consumer demand, so we have companies such as Polystyvert and Pyrowave, which I spoke about, that have said that they've heard that polystyrene is an issue and that they want to find a way to collect and recycle it. They've been working on that.
In fact, Quebec has a circular economy for polystyrene, which is why polystyrene will be added to their extended producer responsibility program in 2025.
We also have other projects and programs in place. We had an initiative that our members supported in London, Ontario, the Hefty EnergyBag. Unfortunately, because the end markets didn't develop as fast as we would have liked, that project did sunset and did not go beyond the pilot scale.
There are other initiatives. The Chemistry Industry Association of Canada was one of the founding members of the circular plastics task force, which is a consortium of organizations working on implementing, testing and piloting circular plastics projects for collection and recycling of flexibles. Think of your Saran wrap and stand-up pouches for packaging.
We have other initiatives. We have a collaboration that we're working with—