Well, we think about how to approach that. And Mercer Holts [ph] was created as a result of the way we think about our procurement and logistics strategy. So we wanted to have one voice in the market. We didn’t want to have a northern and a southern unit. We’re a little disconnected to each other. So Mercer Holts [ph] was bringing together all of the strengths and all of the individuals in the Mercer procurement logistics organizations and putting them into one. And they service both saw mills and pulp mills. And we procured wood on behalf of others as well. And we have our partnership with Mondi, as you know, what we call, wood2m. So it’s – that whole unit is an optimization and a strategic-thinking procurement organization or logistics organization, which helps us ensure that we get wood at the right price at the right time and at the right place, that kind of thing. The sawmill situation is, as you know, the yield of a saw log through a sawmill is 35%, 40% residual fiber. You can only make 60% to 65% lumber out of the saw log, the rest goes to a pulp mill. So if you imagine a big mill like Stendal, and it’s got a procurement circle for the roundwood that it needs, which are not saw logs by the way, we call it industrial wood. And it’s – and you have a cost curve for wood that you need to feed the mill, and you’ve got – at the left-hand side, you’ve got your lowest-cost wood; at the right-hand side, you’ve got your highest-cost wood. When you build a sawmill or have a sawmill beside a pulp mill, all of a sudden, you have a new source of fiber. You procure saw logs that you didn’t use to buy, so your procurement circle can be closer into your mill. And you make lumber, and you make a profit, and then you have the residual fiber that replaces your highest-cost fiber that used to bring in from somewhere else. And that’s why, like I said earlier, marginal cost curve for Rosenthal kind of creeps up, and then it goes flat all the way to the right-hand side, because we don’t have to go very far to get high-cost wood. We’ve got enough wood right around the chimneys, and that’s what we’re trying to recreate at Stendal. And it’s just – we’re just buying a different type of log now, one that we haven’t previously been buying and turning it into lumber and having our residuals to feed the pulp mill and displace higher-cost wood.