Sure. The numbers I was giving in terms of employment for the forestry industry are for the industry as a whole as it stands today, so I haven't tried to extrapolate what might happen under TPP, other than to observe clearly that an increase in the trade in lumber would correlate with an increase in jobs.
What we've observed with, for example, China, which is not in the TPP but which has been a major focus provincially, is that at the time the U.S. economy faltered and lumber exports to the U.S. almost stalled completely, those were progressively, over the last five years, replaced with softwood lumber exports to China in containers, with the volume now I think reaching around six million tonnes of lumber. So even in the current environment, with challenges and trade barriers in place, the industry has been successful in accessing markets in Asia.
If we look at Japan, for example, I have the headlines statistics that Japan is currently importing around 1.2 million tonnes of lumber a year through the port. So if we take the hypothesis that reducing trade barriers will increase trade, and trade is already very significant in a number of B.C.-manufactured products with a number of potential signatories to the TPP, I would say that I think the TPP will have a beneficial effect.