Perhaps I will reduce the intensity of what I've been saying. I rather agree that there is a strong chance it will be allowed to die, because it was actually on Mr. Obama's list of eventual tax cuts released a week ago, I think. That makes it a stronger possibility. But we shouldn't be discounting the strength of the lobbying of the U.S. industry. That strength is being deployed in full force right now.
I certainly hope you're right, and I certainly hope it will be the will of Congress not to prolong this loophole. It really is a loophole; it was never conceived to pay for or give subsidies to a fuel that has been used for decades in the industry.
But I have Canadian industry documents in which the Canadian industry is agreeing that if nothing is done in the next two or three months, damages to the pulp and paper industry might be irreversible. That doesn't mean that every single mill in Canada will actually close, but it means that the ability of Canadian industry to compete, even after December 2009, will be impaired. If nothing is done, this is the risk we're running right now, for something that the U.S. administration should never have done in the first place.