Thank you very much for the question. It's an excellent point.
There is a lot of misinformation and misconception about forestry practices. The most progressive practices today are really around understanding the natural range of variations. Particularly in the boreal forest, for example, fire is a dominant; it's a disturbance-driven ecosystem, largely fire-driven. Forestry is now mimicking the frequency of fire and the patterns of fire so we can work within what's called ecosystem-based forest management.
We're also seeing that so many of the other values that are important for wildlife species, for soil and for water, are being incorporated into forest management planning, as well as all the value that is locally provided. For the most part, in Canada, this is being done on public land, so local voices, indigenous communities, have the opportunity to feed into those long-term forest management plans, which are done over 100 to 150 years. Therefore, very much so, clear-cutting is not the same image in our mind that it might have been 30 or 40 years ago. It's really about sustainability, ecosystem-based management and resilient forests for the future.