Again, thank you to the witnesses.
I'll start off with you, Mr. Renou. You mentioned the biorefineries that European countries are building. You suggested that we could be looking at building these types of biorefineries across Canada in small rural towns that have been hit with reductions in the forest industry. In British Columbia, as people have mentioned, we have any number of examples of that.
I guess my question is twofold. How much fibre do these biorefineries need? Is this something that we could fit into the forest sector as it is now and not impinge on it? Or would it be something that would replace, say, a sawmill that is making two-by-fours now and uses less fibre so that it could fit into the scenario where, in British Columbia especially, we're going to be in a fibre crunch for the coming decades? Is this something where we could provide more jobs for less fibre? I think that's one of the big challenges we have facing the forest industry, at least here in British Columbia.