In rough terms, about 40% would be exported as concentrate. It would be processed at the mine site to a concentrate level and sold into that market.
On the question of whether we support refining in Canada, we absolutely do. The heart of our project is the production of ferrochrome. The issue at play here is really a market issue. What we've done is propose the largest ferrochrome processing facility we can envision, given the market dynamics of that industry, and we feel that we are being very aggressive there.
The viability of our project is supplemented by the ability to export concentrate into world markets that are already established for that product. These work together to justify the project. One point I would disagree with is that if we were not able to export that concentrate, we would not be able to see our way clear to building more refining capacity at this stage because of market constraints, and therefore we'd have to actually descale the project and create fewer jobs as an outcome.