At NorSask we've been very tenacious and managed to stay afloat. It is our main focus and our largest employer in northern Saskatchewan. I don't know how many of you have visited northern Saskatchewan, but we're very remote and isolated and very sparsely populated. The forest industry creates an opportunity where the people live. The trees grow where we live. They don't grow in the prairies of southern Saskatchewan; they grow up in northern Saskatchewan where we live. It's about taking advantage of a natural resource that grows in our community.
The opportunity that has been created by NorSask Forest Products is that first nations have influence. It is not non-aboriginals or multinationals or companies from southern Saskatchewan or Alberta or B.C. that are coming in and providing harvesting or providing trucking. It is an opportunity for us to create these opportunities in our own backyard based on our own natural resources.
I don't think there is going to be a big move away from forestry. If anything, in the case of the bioenergy centre, we're looking for ways to create more synergies with the forestry sector.