The insect industry is one of those. We tick a lot of boxes, especially when it comes to climate change and meeting ESG goals for our partners, both upstream and downstream. There is a lot that we can do.
What can be done is helping with the data. It was mentioned earlier on. It's the collection of data. All of the soldier fly farms and insect farms in Canada have research projects that are currently going on.
With soil health, I mentioned the frass. We produce a fertilizer product that we alone have shown to be tremendously good at helping with soil health. It is getting to a farm before we try our applications and then during, and then it's a question of what we should be measuring. We need guidance and help to be told of the variables that we should be measuring and training the farmers to take the measurements correctly, because the adage of “garbage in, garbage out” is very applicable to data.
We need to make sure that all parties—industry parties, like me and others, the agriculture industry and the farmers—are working from the same playbook. That's crucial. That help comes a lot with the public-private partnerships between us and the university researchers.