That's a good question. Thank you.
The Canadian forest is mature. It's extremely mature. In fact, most of Canada's forests are older than nature would let them be because of fire suppression. A mature forest tends to be a net emitter rather than an absorber of carbon dioxide.
That being said, to the extent that we can create new forests, for example, through aforestation of areas that are marginal agriculturally or that are otherwise being used for less valuable purposes, the creation of new forests would sequester more carbon.
The other way we could sequester more carbon would be to manage our forests in a more intensive way to grow more volume, which of course the foresters have always wanted to do. In Canada, we've been a bit reluctant because we like to sustain the natural ecosystems rather than maximize carbon storage in the forest.
A third way of sequestering is sequestering in product. When a tree grows and we process it into paper, all the carbon is still in the paper, and at the same time a second tree is growing. So through a natural process of harvesting, regeneration of the forest, and product creation, you get sequestration.
That being said, Kyoto does not recognize sequestration in products, only in living material.
In the forest industry, our basic job is carbon management. We live inside the carbon cycle. We harvest, regrow, harvest, regrow. So for us, carbon cycle management is part of life.
The bottom line is, can we reach our Kyoto targets by depending on sequestration in the forest? The answer is no. We can reach our Kyoto targets by emitting less carbon dioxide, which requires massive retooling of industry.