When I made the statement earlier, I was thinking specifically of waste materials left on an agricultural field, the straw or things like that. In this day and age, with controls being exercised on electrical generation in the province, companies are looking at the opportunity to co-fire biomass and coal. The biomass that's being considered is, in fact, agricultural residue as well as some municipal solid waste and mill waste, bark, and other segments coming out of the sawmills and pulp mills in the province. There's significant opportunity.
On the subject of food versus fuel, yes, you can look at off-grade canola oil as a feedstock to produce biofuels, and some companies are doing that. You can look at purpose-grown crops, triticale and camelina, to be moving into the bioindustrial sector as opposed to food. There are also animal wastes that can be the feedstock for bioindustrial product development, so there's quite a broad spectrum available.
Earlier, yes, I was specifically thinking of straw that was left on the field, but it's much broader than that.