Well, that is a problem. Paper mills today generally consume a huge portion of the residuals from different sawmills or chip plantations. The paper industry is in a significant decline. North American paper consumption peaked in 1999 or 2000 and it's been on a precipitous decline since. Today it's probably less than 45% or 50% of the demand we had in 2000. Some markets, like standard newsprint, are seeing less than a quarter of their previous consumption, and people have had to figure out other ways.
J.D. Irving is looking at conversions to other grades that are growing. I think the reality is that it's just a matter of time before significantly more of the paper companies in Canada are going to be faced with the same challenge of either repurposing or shutting down. There are a number of growth markets, however. Tissue is growing, so the assets can also be repurposed as that, or as packaging, which seems to be in a significant growth cycle right now. These are some of the opportunities we are looking at.