Thank you. I think that's a very important line of inquiry.
In the business model, the pulp and paper sector here, in a sense, is intimately melded with the solid wood sector. Our pulp and paper mills rely overwhelmingly on chips, sawdust, shavings, and so on, from the sawmill sector, and if one side goes down, they both go down.
The long suit we've had on the west coast with our northern fibre was with the quality of that fibre, but technology around the world in the last 25 years has been advancing dramatically such that papermakers, tissue makers, and so on, can do a much better job now with short fibre hardwoods grown very rapidly in places like South America or Southeast Asia. The desirability of relatively high-cost long-fibre pulp from northern Canada is not as strong as it was a generation ago.
I fear there's some danger that the pulp sector is going to go the way of the newsprint sector more broadly. The marketplace is changing fundamentally and profoundly, and it's a global matter. Competition is getting greater and greater, so I fear our pulp manufacturers are going to face a significantly declining market, and they need to do something else with that high-quality input fibre.