Okay, thank you. I just wanted to clarify that.
I come from Vancouver Island north, of course, where we just had an announcement last week that another mill is closing, putting 257 mill workers out of their jobs. Attached to that, or right next door, is a fibre mill. They make very high-quality paper for magazines, and we're concerned about the future of that mill once the contract to supply fibre runs out for the mill company. So there's huge concern all over the place.
We're seeing lots of logging happening, which is great, but the problem is the logs aren't being milled in our communities. And there's more and more concern that we're becoming a nation of exporters of raw resources, and the value-added is not there.
So I'm glad to hear you say there is hope for the forest industry—some in British Columbia have written it off, or are writing it off. I'm an optimist and I think we can turn this around.
I'm really curious to know about the value-added. First I want to know what percentage of the softwood lumber we export. We have the dollar value here, but does that include raw log exports, or are those separate? What incentives are there for value-added in the fibre portion of it and also in the wood products?
I think I'll just leave it there for now, because that will take a few minutes.