It's interesting that two major energy companies in Alberta are funding that project as a way of reclaiming oil well sites by bringing those native grasslands back. I think that also shows that there is a good diversity of companies and groups that are funding that type of research.
Mr. Desrochers, I didn't have a chance to go too much into this before, but you were talking about the impact that carbon taxes and those things could have on agriculture. It's interesting that agriculture, in terms of its GHG emissions, has pretty much stayed steady for the last 15 to 20 years at around 70 megatonnes. Despite that, their production has grown exponentially. Certainly our concern, and the concern that we have from speaking to our producers, is that they're the one group that will likely be paying the carbon tax over and over and over again. Cattle liners, fertilizer companies—they'll all be charging them, and they can't pass that on to anyone.
Can you talk a little bit about how important it is to ensure that if we want to meet the goals we have set, which I think are important, our agriculture producers need to have the tools to succeed? Some of these policies that we're seeing come through.... As you said, we've never seen the carbon tax achieve anything it says it's going to achieve in any other jurisdiction. In fact, our producers have been successful without having to worry about it. Can you talk about the importance of that?