Maybe I could just add one thing, as well.
Outside of the agreement itself, our department has been working for the last four or five years with almost every province in the country; with a number of other federal departments; with three or four universities across the country, from UBC in the west to UNB in the east; and with Forintek, the forest products research organization, essentially to provide on-site industry advice in terms of industrial advisers. We have a network of 35 of them across the country who go into small and medium-size manufacturers of secondary wood products. It is essentially designed to improve their productivity and their competitiveness.
We've just gone through a fairly rigorous evaluation of that in terms of return on investment, measured in terms of their own improvements in productivity, whether that's measured in sales or costs around technology or labour cost per value produced. At this point we're assessing that it's somewhere between 8:1 and 10:1 in terms of return on investment. It's been very effective. There's been a strong demand for this kind of expertise. As I say, it's a parallel program initiative, parallel to the trade policy discussions going on right now.