That's a very good question. The issue is that we could make biofuel—and in certain places it's going to make total sense, as my colleagues in Quebec were talking about—but there are also some opportunities to make higher-end value, such as using it, if it's possible, to make wood flooring. You'd go through manufacturing in Canada, which creates more jobs. If we could make all kinds of chemicals in the way the oil and gas industry does, the value would be tremendous, but at the same time, we understand we're not there yet.
Biofuels would be at the lower end of value. Then you would go into longer-lived wood products, which would be a bit more valuable. Then you would go toward the full high-value biorefinery concept. However, we're not there yet with those residues, so I think it's going to be a time of transition.
What we use right now is about $120 million, and we're a $67-billion industry, so that 25 million cubic metres is in the billions of dollars.