I think when it gets into the bioeconomy, it's taking a broader perspective. I think NRCan and the forestry side have done a really good job of developing their framework, and it works well for forestry, but I think we need an all-encompassing approach here in Canada, which is broader. It's one thing to have the forests and the raw materials and do a supply push and try to put products out into the market. You need market pull, and where is the market pull going to come from? It's going to come from downstream, down these value chains, whether that be automotive, aerospace, furniture, construction materials, or whatever. Linking those all together and getting them all working together, pulling and pushing together in Canada, will help us to be successful in this space.
When you start looking at it from that perspective, you need all of the supply side groups, which is forestry and ag, and you need the market pull side, which is economic development, and you need the capability to do it, which means environment, to work together with industry to be able to make these things happen in a coordinated way. If it stays fragmented, you won't get maximized value out of it, and we will lose out to other jurisdictions, which are getting much more coordinated.