Certainly, I don't think greenhouse gas reduction and poverty reduction are mutually exclusive. You may need to implement separate and unrelated policies to ensure that you're not unduly affecting people on low incomes or seniors on fixed incomes.
In terms of rural living, there are some real opportunities within a bioenergy system to increase employment in those areas. You would be increasing wage rates and increasing well-being. Certainly, it's not necessarily the case for all people who live in rural areas, but none of this is going to affect their collection and use of heating wood, so that's on the one hand.
On the other hand, there's just the natural turnover of our stock of vehicles, our furnaces and our water heaters. The impact of minimum energy efficiency regulations means that people's energy costs also have a downward force acting on them. It's not just that fuels will get more expensive, but that generally speaking, over the years and decades, indeed, the efficiency of everybody's equipment is going up. That can mitigate a lot of this.