As a global number, I guess, in Canada our industry is directly or indirectly responsible for 228,000 jobs. As I said, the important thing to remember here is that it's an integrated industry, and an impact on one element of the supply chain can ripple across the others. We're challenged by getting labour in our meat plants here and that affects cattle feeders, because it disrupts our ability to get the cattle, or we're held back because they can't process it at the level they need to. That affects us.
In terms of jobs, I alluded to the Balzac meat plant. The construction of a meat plant is a rare event these days. We're down to three large plants, or four, we'll say, as there are some other small ones, but these are federally inspected plants. That Balzac plant will have a direct impact on unemployment of about 300 to 400 jobs, so that's positive. It's also about moving product offshore, reducing our dependency on the United States. As was mentioned, it's not only for Japan. The operators of that plant will be looking at Europe as well as the other plants in the country. If they can move product to more markets, that means more employment opportunities.