It's all a matter of planning. The difference is that in planning roads we have a history of doing it over the long term and we keep doing it. Technology has evolved rapidly and the need for technology in forestry in terms of broadband has surged, I would say, over the last few years. We can dream now about what we can do with broadband that we were not dreaming about 10 years ago. There are synergies. There's an accelerated need for it. It's also a way, which is extremely important, of getting jobs of higher quality around forestry as well.
Think about this. If someone can operate machinery with all of those screens around them, with all the intelligence and the robotics that enable them to be in the field and to control five machines at the same time, that's a much cooler job for our young kids up north than just roughing it alone with their diesel machine. That's where we're going.
It's the same thing the mining industry has done with transfers in some sections of the world. We need to get there because we don't have enough people and we need to attract the young.