Let me just quickly say that the pine beetle is creating a massive disaster in British Columbia, and it's spreading to Alberta. Nobody in Canada should feel that they will be exempt from this kind of pestilence going forward. It is the result of climate change and other factors. It has created a serious problem, because the industry in the United States is absolutely paranoid that the timber that's been affected by the pine beetle, which is being harvested on an accelerated basis, will flood the market. So it's been very important to get this framework agreement put in place and to get the kind of surge mechanism we have in place that will give a reasonable amount of headroom to us to deal with the pine beetle and other related problems.
Ultimately, pine beetle wood is going to decline in value. We're going to have to develop other products in other markets, but there is a crisis. What will happen after the pine beetle is that the rest of the forest base will not be as healthy. We will not have, 10 years from now, the same allowable cut that we have today. There will be dramatic reductions, and we have to pay an awful lot of attention to ensuring that communities that are dependent on mills processing pine beetle timber have an alternative source of either timber or other economic opportunities.