Well, it varies by company. Some of the companies figured out a little earlier that pulp and paper and lumber are not going to be enough and got into the bioenergy and biomaterials game earlier, but now even the ones who were a bit slower are looking at it.
By province, I can't say that one province is ahead of the other. Each has entered into this transformation game from different points.
I can say that B.C....I'll say they came into this too late, but B.C. stopped trying to keep every mill open sooner, before Alberta, and then Alberta came in very soon after that. Then it was Ontario. Quebec has been the slowest to do it. That is because of different social policies in these provinces and because of different economic circumstances. The absolute collapse of the coastal industry in B.C. forced that government to face the music faster than others have had to.
You've got to have a lot of sympathy for the provincial governments. If you're being asked to pull the plug on a town, I don't know how many people would volunteer for that job. But unfortunately, the workers suffer more because of the hesitation than they would have if we had gone to a faster restructuring.