In the long term, very much so. Thanks for your question.
We have capacity right now. In the one particular reservoir, we store 36 million tonnes, as I referenced earlier. We have capacity today in that one reservoir to move an incremental 80 million tonnes, so up to about 116 million tonnes.
We have identified storage capacity of up to about 250 million tonnes on our lands in western Canada at this particular time. There's plenty of capacity in the reservoirs. There is infrastructure in place to our existing assets.
When thinking about this long term, we talk about the transition. Just so you're aware, what we do is we acquire the CO2—we don't get credits for acquiring the CO2—we sequester it, put it in the ground—we don't get credits for it—and we recycle approximately one-third of that. Let's use 300 million cubic feet a day of CO2. About 200 million a day is recycled and about 100 million is new purchases that we have to acquire at this particular time to put in the ground. We don't get credits for those.
Across western Canada—