Thank you for that question, Mr. Tonks.
I don't know immediately about transportation, but maybe I could mention another region that I am observing, I guess, from a distance, and that is the province of Upper Austria. This area also suffered from an economic depression 20 years ago as a lot of their heavy industry declined and their light industry, which was furniture building, also declined, and their forestry industry declined.
Then some clever person realized they could take some of the boiler-making capacity, use some of the old forests that no longer made good furniture wood, put them together with some chip-making facilities, and they started the wood chip industry and you have these wood chip or wood pellet stoves and so on. All of this came from Upper Austria.
It's been fascinating to watch how they've integrated the collection of the wood, which is second-growth and low-quality wood, with the former boilermakers to make the new wood chip furnaces, what we call pellet stoves.
Then they began to realize that was only half of the story. They had to deal with the problem of making the homes and the buildings more energy efficient to begin with. So they became one of the most aggressive--and I don't want to use the word “aggressive” in a bad sense, but in a positive sense--promoters of energy efficiency combined with renewables. So in the past, whereas almost all of Austria's homes outside of the major urban areas relied on fuel oil for heating, now it's down to about zero, because they've managed to make a complete transition to these pellet stoves for water heating and space heating.
Probably if I search my mind I'll come up with some ideas on transportation, but I thought that would be a good starting point.