Yes, absolutely.
In the U.S., it's actually consulting companies, habitat banking companies, that are undertaking that work, and it's been a quite successful model in the U.S. Certainly, we would like to see conservation organizations, like Trout Unlimited or the Nature Conservancy of Canada, who do restoration projects, be able to sell credits from those projects.
The key consideration would be that there would need to be additionality, so when you create a habitat it's not going to be the same as a natural habitat. If those conservation organizations could sell those credits at two or three to one, and use those funds to do more restoration work, we would set ourselves on a path that would both spiral our resources for restoration and also create a very efficient and easy system for proponents to buy into when they need an offset.