Thanks for your question.
The emissions in our sector are rising to 2030, and that's the problem. There's a second problem. If we look around the world compared with some of our most significant competitors, like countries in Europe and the U.S., we're noticing that their public investments in farmers and agri-environmental programs—programs that help farmers adopt practices to reduce our environmental footprint including GHGs—are much more significant. Those are two problems at hand here.
For agriculture to contribute to Canada's climate solution, which I think we all want it to and I think every farmer does, we need to reduce our emissions.