I mentioned the cluster to indicate how far industry has come and that we're not talking about just kind of pie-in-the-sky ideas from analysts in government. This was industry that came together, with $400 million of funds that they're prepared to invest.
Now, they are not finalists in the competition, right? They're down to nine and then they're bringing that down to five. My personal mission is to figure out how to help them stay alive because of the momentum that will bring. It's everything from Canfor investing in new bioenergy facilities in Prince George to some other opportunities in the Ontario space, particularly around chemicals. There's the Thunder Bay to Sarnia “maritime highway”, if you will, of turning some of the waste products in the Thunder Bay area into chemicals that could be used—sugars, lignins, and things like that—in the chemical industry in the Sarnia area.
So we have one cluster around Ontario, and then I would say the other core cluster would be around British Columbia. Then it would be hard not to mention the cluster around Montreal and Quebec City.