What I would add is that the devil is in the details. There's carbon output into the atmosphere, and there's carbon sequestration. So there are essentially two places in the process where we can have impact, and I'll go to an example that was previously mentioned in a question about, for example, switching an environment from a bog and through mitigation ending up with a forest.
One of the things we understand about bogs is that they're fantastic places for carbon sequestration, because once they capture carbon, they degrade very slowly. So even though they're a small area globally, they actually capture a disproportionate fraction of carbon. So those kinds of understandings about the process of sequestration and what kinds of habitat management strategies will favour enhanced sequestration or lower the rate of release are critically important. That's the sort of place where I would say the devil is in the details. There's a lot we can do on the sequestration side in addition to measures that would help limit release of carbon into the atmosphere.