All the results to date, particularly of soil measurements of organic matter over the last 20 years, have indicated a whole different curve, if you will, from the original century model, as it was called. We know the practices are good. It's a matter now of proving it to the world. It's starts here in Canada, and then we'll try to prove it to the world as well.
Another meeting I'm supposed to go to tomorrow is to discuss the proposal. It has been mostly in Saskatchewan for the last 20 years. We'd like to broaden that to the prairies to have a better handle on the different climatic factors and different management systems, including the livestock sector in their pasture and hay land management.
The foresight was given by an Agriculture Canada researcher based out of Swift Current, Saskatchewan over 20 years ago. He has been involved since the Kyoto days. He theorized it with his colleagues around the country. He has been the lead on this because he's close to the ground, literally, in Saskatchewan. He's going to be publishing his results finally in a journal. It had never gone that far, but it has been publicized otherwise. It's very encouraging that we are doing more good than any scientist otherwise had thought we even could in adding carbon organic matter back to the soil.