If I may add something, it's important to recognize that markets for stumpage or standing timber are inherently local. Standing timber, like a lot of natural resources, is inherently a residual value good. To give you a very practical simple example, a tree that's 200 kilometres away from a mill is going to be worth less than the exact same tree if it's 50 kilometres away from a mill, and that's because hauling costs are going to be less expensive because the distance is shorter.
Other dynamics play into this, as my colleague Mr. Barker touched on. Certain species are worth more than other species. If you have a stand that has a lot of western red cedar, for example, which is a high-value product, that stand is going to be worth more than stands with other species, and local demand....
I think one of the very important things to know is that stumpage markets in each province.... Even within British Columbia, for example, you have a coastal market and you have an interior market, and even within the interior market, you have a lot of sub-markets, so the pricing is very idiosyncratic and dependent on the local circumstances. That's a position that we've taken and tried to explain, frankly, to the U.S. Department of Commerce.