Mr. Newman, of course in 2008, the forestry sector...2007...coming from Prince Albert, we had our pulp mill closed. We've basically seen the whole forestry sector just collapse. To be honest with you now it's coming back. We have seen some of the sawmills opening up. The pulp mill is scheduled to open up in another 18 months hopefully, again, if we can find labour and the appropriate trades, which is another topic we'll talk about on another day. But one of the things I think created the problem is our dependence on one market for all the product we were making.
Of course, with the CETA and TPP you're going to have access to a wider range of consumers, 500 million in Europe alone, and then I'm not sure how many millions would be in Asia. That's the number that Mr. Holder could probably tell me off the top of his head.
What does that mean to the sector? Will that not give it a base level that's high enough that you could have consistent production throughout a wide range of different types of anomalies that may be country-specific?