We are doing it. What's preventing us is our politicians and civil servants. We are working very hard in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia to try to replace coal, petcoke, and natural gas, and take those fuels and replace them with biosolids, which come every day and are greenhouse gas neutral; biomasses; and plastics that cannot be recycled. We do not want to take materials that could be reduced, reused, or recycled. Anything that goes to a landfill that will degrade and start to produce greenhouse gases or methane should not go to a landfill.
We are working very hard, but again, it's very difficult to get provincial civil servants, who have the authority over fuels and wastes in their province, to move. In Burnaby, for example, they're looking at doubling the size of the incinerator, which will then double the amount of greenhouse gases in the city of Burnaby. The Province of British Columbia is trying to tell metro Vancouver that it should be sending its biosolids to the two cement facilities there to lower greenhouse gases.
We really need to work more in trying to get the politicians and civil servants to understand that the fight against climate change is the biggest fight of our lives. We cannot wait around for 10 or 15 years until 2030 and still be at the same levels we're at today. It's an urgent challenge, and politicians and civil servants need to be seized with it at every opportunity.