Well, we're living one at the moment. With respect to immediate transformation of the forest industry, real-time, is the dissolving pulp and getting into textiles. But there's a tremendous array of new products that we've unleashed from the Canadian forest, and we're beginning, through a number of enabling programs federally, to demonstrate their applicability at a commercial level.
I'll give you just one example, but I could give you 15 examples or more. The one example that I'm quite jazzed about is something called nanocrystalline cellulose. It's taking the tree to the nano level. We are the first generators of nanocrystalline cellulose from trees. This is such an extraordinarily tiny substance that we are the envy of the world. When we go to Sweden, a powerhouse in the forest industry, and Finland, and the U.S., they're all looking at us, asking how we got that done in Canada.
This, by the way, opens up an incredible array of new opportunities for the forest industry. It can be put into composites; it can even be put into, to my even understanding, things like bone structures and tires. The applications of this new product just go on and on and on.
So it's an exciting new world in the forest industry. We're no longer just hewers of wood and drawers of water.