To answer that question, I think, absolutely, that any community that has the ability to put in a pellet plant can use that residual waste. Again, it's subject to the length of distance that it gets hauled, but there's really no need to burn that slash in situ in the forest. Ideally we'd be able to use that in a pellet plant or in some sort of biomass conversion facility.
We've been speaking to a lot of different companies about their technologies because, ideally, what we would like to do is just what you're saying—to take some of that biomass and turn it into a more advanced product, something that's obviously based on this renewable resource that we have. There's a nice little facility called B.C. Biocarbon that's doing some pretty interesting things in McBride, B.C. We've been spending some time with them, looking at something that might turn into something, but with a lot of them it's very early in terms of the technology and they need the support from—