There's $3 million in savings on our waste collection side; you're correct. That is based on the frequency of collection, the automation, the trucks that use fuel that costs less. On the biofuel side, yes, $4 million to $5 million of sales are projected from the biofuel plant, but we also have to pay a tipping fee for the green waste we're going to put in. To answer your question, you couldn't do a plant and accept free green waste and make a profit at it. You could accept green waste at a competitive tipping rate, which is a lot less than garbage rates, but you would still have to charge for people to dump there to produce the fuel.
You can't produce enough fuel to pay for the plant unless you get some revenue from the organic waste being dumped there. We have two sides to the equation. How much money can the plant make? How much can the city save from dumping at $50 a tonne versus dumping at $107 a tonne? But we still have to pay the $50 a tonne, if you understand.