—for a couple of reasons. One is geographic, and the other is, as we've been talking about, the price. It is basically that our operating costs are so high that we're not competitive in that market. You have increased transportation, plus you have a price area you have to consider.
With regard to the CETA—and I will hopefully not offend anyone—we have been commenting on that to the department. CETA may have opened other doors for other sectors in Canada but for the forest products sector it actually has a deleterious effect on us. The market has been closed to us in a number of areas. We have to have notified bodies for market access for the European Union with the same standards that we apply in Canada, and that is very expensive. We have different grading requirements. I don't want to get too technical, but keep in mind that for kiln drying, which is an added-value process that was introduced some 20-odd years ago and is an internationally accepted process, Europe no longer accepts kiln drying. They want everything labelled “dry graded”.
My quick answer is that CETA doesn't work for the forest products sector in Canada.