[Inaudible--Editor]...there is a problem. That's why in terms of our hardwood, there is an opportunity for us. I already sent one container of Canadian red oak to India. It's still there. It cost me, I think, 1,600 rupees a square foot. It's still there. I was trying to make 100 or 200 rupees, but I am not able to sell it.
I'm also working on the wood. We also have a factory in Surrey, B.C. We make kitchen cabinet doors out of maple and oak. They are very good doors. We make almost 700 doors every day. We're a fully computerized factory. We're trying to export those doors to India. I built my own house and I put maple doors in my house. I'm showing those doors to people. We're doing so many things.
Over the last year or so, there's been a case with the Indian government in the supreme court on the clay that people were using. My first business was making bricks for people building houses with bricks. That industry has been on hold for almost more than a year, because there's been a clash with the mining department. It's been at the high court, at the supreme court.
People have not been making bricks since last year. The price of bricks has gone from 3,000 rupees to 6,000 rupees per thousand. People are thinking about finding some alternatives in India. Personally, if there is no duty on Canadian lumber, people may start thinking about making their walls of wood as an alternative.