I'm glad you asked that question because I can take a little bit more time to complete my answer from the previous question.
Forestry, as a part of a series of natural resource sectors, also qualifies for additional investment over time. For example, there is $1 billion over four years starting in 2017-18 to support clean technology in the forestry, fisheries, mining, energy, and agricultural sectors as part of the innovation agenda.
Also there is $87.2 million over two years for Natural Resources Canada projects across the country that support research in forestry, mining and minerals, earth sciences and mapping, and innovation in energy technology.
I also want to say that we know they impact families and individuals, and we try to make this a part of every answer we give to questions about low commodity prices. We know there is hardship when commodity prices are as low as they are, and we know that in Alberta times are tougher than they have been in a very long time. We're attentive to the statistics, but they're more than that, they have human consequences. That's why the government is responding, through transfers, through infrastructure investment, through changes to employment insurance, through these investments in new technologies that will ultimately rely on the innovative skill and, I would say, entrepreneurial genius of so many in Alberta who have built that economy, and will rebuild it again. Many of the investments are across the sectors of NRCan's responsibilities and the government, including forestry, mining, and oil and gas.