Sir, I think there are two really important factors that are going to be the key determinants of where this goes.
In our view our share of the U.S. market is going to remain flat or potentially slightly decline. There are really two reasons for that. One is much of what this discussion has been about today, which is a sustained commitment to the expansion and diversification of our markets. We really see the tremendous potential that continues to exist in Asia. We do subscribe to the view that China is the new China, that there is a tremendous opportunity there to continue to expand our footprint and the range, diversity, and use of our products there. That's one thing that will keep the percentage down.
The second one, and perhaps this is much more crucial, is British Columbia is at 52% of softwood lumber production in this province and we are facing a timber supply crisis. You only have to get into a helicopter and fly over British Columbia to see the extent of the devastation and what that has meant. We are coming through the end of what is a 10-year period that has been the greatest salvage effort in the history of this province to try to salvage some economic value from dead timber. We are going to watch the annual allowable cut, which in the interior part of the province was traditionally around 55 million cubic metres, come down to around 42 million cubic metres and it is going to stay there for the better part of a century. We see about a 17% decline in our production between now and 2020.