It's a good question. Thank you very much.
That's absolutely right. When I said “low-hanging fruit”, I think we have long-term strategies and medium-term strategies, but what we are focusing on is what exists, what we have right now with these landfills, which are generating these methane gases.
What we are saying is, look, municipalities at the grassroots have issues. They are not able to export this garbage out—which they were able to do five or six years ago—to Asia and other countries. They're now all stuck. Several municipalities with which we talk on a daily basis are even stuck with plastics that they're afraid to put into the landfills. They're actually storing them in containers next to the landfills because they don't know what to do with them. They're all waiting for a solution. Also, some of these municipalities are actually shipping or trucking, paying $120 to $200 a tonne to ship the waste 100 kilometres away to a landfill.
What we are proposing is, look, we could actually use that waste and generate revenue for the municipalities—because that's a cost saving for them—and actually use graphite, one of the by-products where we'd be able to get more of the carbon content the waste has, which is basically used in EV batteries. What we're trying to say is that we can clean up your landfills. You could actually cost-save your line item of revenue costs where you're shipping and transporting that waste and at the same time get your lands free of these landfills.
The issue we're having is capex. Nobody wants to write the capex bill: They're willing to give us a 15-year contract or a 20-year contract, but they're saying, “Hey, you need to build this.” This is where we're approaching provincial and even federal governments and some of the agencies and saying that we are the kinds of companies that would need some support whereby we could actually prove that these technologies are working.
As we get through the next level, maybe hydrogen and the other broader strategies would play into that. By that time, we would be able to help reduce.... Our math right now shows that we can reduce 3°C of the climate temperature in Canada if we get rid of these landfills. There are basically 32 million tonnes of waste being put into landfills.