Those investments covered a number of different areas.
I might mention as an example the forestry industry, where the government has invested more than $1.7 billion, and this is creating results with close to a 1,000% increase in Canadian softwood lumber exports to China.
The budget also provided over $100 million to support continuing transformation of the forestry industry in areas of innovation and market diversification. A couple of the examples are the expanding opportunities program to help to diversify Canadian wood and help develop the non-residential school and mid-rise construction markets in North America. Another is the forest innovation program of some $66 million to support the emergence of breakthrough technologies that will extract greater value from the wood we already harvest.
There are other areas such as the clean energy fund, which relates to, among other things, carbon capture and storage projects that we have been supportive of. I think it's understood that Canada is a leader in the field of carbon capture and storage at both the provincial and federal levels, and $2 billion has been invested in that particular innovative technology.
There have been a number of areas where the economic action plan response to the recession has not only enabled the country to emerge more quickly and in better economic shape than other countries, but has also enhanced particular industries in the natural resource area.