There's a huge opportunity for the government to facilitate and enable more work around measurement and reporting and to do it in ways that reduce the potential burden.
In Europe, we see that one of the reasons the European Commission is not that aggressive on an emissions trading scheme on agriculture is that it's so complex to really get a good, accurate and reliable measure.
It's not just a measure. One of the things that has a huge impact on the agriculture sector's emissions footprint every year is whether it's dry or wet on the Prairies. Even if you can actually measure the carbon footprint, what do you do with your border carbon adjustment when all of a sudden we've had a really wet year and the carbon footprint of our western Canadian crops goes up?
These systems don't lend themselves to the same types of measures and approaches that a steel plant does. They are fundamentally different systems. That organic system that exists in agriculture is so wildly different that, again, it's not just a matter of measurement. Even once you have the data, what do you do with it and how can you use it in a way that achieves these outcomes? That's really tough.