With regard to your question about the sustainable Canadian agricultural partnership, we certainly view it as a step in the right direction. We're still waiting on details of the resilient agricultural landscape program, but it's very much in line, from our understanding to date, with our interest in seeing direct support made available to farmers for adoption of environmental best management practices.
I would say, as Keith alluded to, that one of the critical parts of this entire discussion for us is the engagement with farmers themselves early in the policy development process, and making sure that when we are designing programs and policies, we have a working group that brings farmer voices to the table early in that process so that programming actually meets the practical realities of farmers on the ground.
I would also say—and there were a few references to this already—that additional funding for extension and knowledge transfer would help ensure that the right information is getting to farmers on the ground around emerging technologies, and that they have the support available to adopt them. In many respects, there are programs in place. It's a question of cost-sharing thresholds and how much is required from a capital standpoint. As we heard from many today, SMEs are struggling with pressures around available capital due to the rising cost of production, and that's a real critical concern.
I'll conclude with a point on the importance of direct on-farm measurement of emissions. As a future direction, we would very much like to see further support directed toward that. One of the challenges we see, whether it's in carbon pricing or other emissions reduction measures, is the inability to truly capture what's happening on a farm. Modelling can only go so far, and you're limited by the data you can collect. There are emerging technologies for measuring these things on farm that can be far more accurate and can provide a much more nuanced and, to Keith's point, regionally variable approach to supporting emissions reductions.