Thank you for hosting ALUS in your community. We're very proud of what's been achieved there. We hope to repeat that Outaouais success again and again across the country with proper financial support.
What's interesting to recognize is that sometimes our work falls through the cracks. Clearly, if we're using natural systems on farmland to do something that benefits biodiversity, there's a clear water benefit to that, a clear climate benefit and a very clear resilience benefit to our rural communities across Canada. Sometimes we get caught up on governments delivering on one of those four priorities without recognizing the opportunity to tackle all four of the problems at the same time by using nature to help us solve biodiversity, climate and the water crisis that we face in Canada.
It's funny how we have siloed things, but at the same time, the opportunity exists to see other actors that can benefit from our work. I point most directly to our community partners in Alberta that come to us as a municipality, because they value the natural infrastructure that our project sites can provide to them on top of the climate, water, and resilience benefits.
Harmonizing on this point of leverage, many things can occur when we work with nature and find opportunities in the rural countryside in Canada.