Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you to all our panellists for being here. I appreciate this.
I'm just expanding on the line of questioning by my colleagues. It's fantastic that now we can say that all the major political parties agree on the importance of the price of pollution. I'm glad that the Conservatives have changed their minds and come on board with that. I appreciate that.
I want to say that everyone on this panel, from all the parties, supports farmers. Our government is supporting farmers and the innovations that were mentioned and that they are championing.
I know we have different pillars and ways of supporting them, and we all agree on pricing pollution. The government is saying that we want to further reduce emissions as much as possible and affect the impact of climate change and continue to help farmers build resilience. We also want to support that clean technology, which will also create some jobs.
If I could direct my questions to Mr. Parry off the top, you touched briefly on some new clean technologies, which are already emerging. You specifically mentioned Triple Green using biofuels. I think that's out of Manitoba. It uses dry heat and biomass fuel. I have done some studying on that, because in my riding of Kitchener—Conestoga, there's a company called Bio-En. It uses anaerobic digesters, which take the methane from the composting and turn it into energy.
Can you expand on some of the ways we can use biomass fuel to create heat?