As I began to say to Mr. Davies, it's a wonderful, exciting opportunity for the forestry industry. Everything from the use of wood for construction.... We have something called cross-laminated timber. You can make taller wood buildings in countries that have earthquake challenges. Timber construction is actually more malleable and better in an earthquake zone. That would be an opportunity to sell, in a new and innovative way, the very old material of wood. Engineered wood and cross-laminated timber is on the wood side.
On the pulp and paper side we have an amazing array of chemical processes and new uses. I'll give you a couple of practical examples. I mentioned the automobile parts. As you boil down the fibres to make pulp, there are oils and sugars that come out of that. You further refine those for making methanol. One of our companies sells it to make windshield wiper fluid. So oils and sugars that come out of the cells of the trees can be made into new products. We didn't use the whole tree 50 or 60 years ago. We left a lot of sawdust and debris as a waste product. Now those waste streams, the lignans, are turned into oils. The sawdust and the other materials can be further refined to make new products. We're now using 95%-plus of the logs we bring into our mills. It's much more sophisticated today than it was 25 or 30 years ago.