The first thing I have to say is that New Brunswick has more pellet boilers.... I think at last count there were 30 boilers like the one at the hospital that you mentioned. They are in hospitals, schools, churches, and government office buildings. New Brunswick has been a real leader in that way.
We're holding a forum in Fredericton at the Crowne Plaza Lord Beaverbrook Hotel on December 12, and at last count I think we have five government ministers coming. That's been a bright spot for our industry.
I have to plead ignorance on this friction drying that you're talking about. This is the first I've heard of it.
On the torrefaction, you're drying fibre in a low-oxygen environment and creating a product that has a little higher energy density than wood pellets. It's essentially a pellet, but it's a more refined pellet. One of the OPG plants in Ontario is using a product like advanced wood pellets right now. The technologies are out there and available, but so far the European power utilities have just not been willing to use the torrefied product. We've been trying since about 2010 to get market penetration of torrefied pellets, and the minute a market emerges, we'll be there to make it. You can essentially use all the existing equipment in the pellet plant and just add one more process to make that torrefied product.