Thank you for your question, Mrs. Chatel. It's been a long time since I've had the opportunity to have a discussion with you in French, but I'm still going to answer your question in English.
In spring 2021, Nature United released a peer-reviewed study on 24 natural climate solutions that can bring down Canada's greenhouse gas emissions by the equivalent of 11% of our overall emissions by 2030. Lo and behold, we found that 11 agricultural pathways were among the most effective and can bring down approximately 50% of the total emissions reductions through natural pathways that we calculated. What's really interesting about these pathways is that they're available now. Farmers across Canada are starting to use them, but the uptake is nowhere near where it needs to be.
The other thing we went on to build on—and we did a study in partnership with Bain & Company—was that while farmers adopting some of these practices would see declines in yields and revenues in the first couple of years, by the time they got to the third and fourth year, after a little bit of support from the government, they were seeing up to 30% increase in their revenues. At the same time, some of these are practices like cover cropping, which reduces the amount of water that they require, and nutrient management, which reduces the cost, as many of these products, like fertilizer, are seeing inflationary pressures as well. You have a double benefit happening through these practices, where you're reducing the cost while seeing benefits to farmers' bottom lines as well as emissions reductions.
What we see that farmers really need right now is really three-fold. The first is that they need incentives to make the switch. Farmers really look to the people around them to adopt new practices, so we really need to get projects off the ground and on the ground, so to speak. The second is that they need financial support to bridge that gap, as I was describing previously, and the third is that they need information and extension services. We've seen the provinces—