How many banks did we walk into at the beginning, and we were basically told, “Nah, it's a forestry project. It's a first nations project. What are you going to put up?” Great. We would say that we had a power purchase agreement, and their eyes would open.
On that power purchase agreement, part of the negotiation is that it must remain in Whitesand First Nation. Nobody can come in and just take over the power purchase agreement. It's an extremely attractive revenue stream.
Even with that, we weren't openly welcome. On that gap acuity, the type we're talking about, let's make it a $75-million project. We can finance $25 million of that, and we're looking at those two capital funding programs. That's why they were designed for projects like ours.
The greenhouse gas reduction account is from carbon credit sales in Ontario, and it's specifically designed for projects such as ours that are going to build the low-carbon economy, the bioeconomy. Those are avenues, I think, any type of project can go into for it.
It would be very difficult without those programs for us to go to build. I don't know how we could do it.