Thank you for that question.
If you're talking specifically about our natural gas fuelling business, I can use a very localized case study. If we look at the LNG production facility that we are about to commission in Elmworth, Alberta, if every gallon of LNG produced at our first LNG production facility replaced an energy equivalent amount of diesel, and given that natural gas emits 30% less greenhouse gas emissions than diesel does, then our 50,000 gallon-per-day facility would translate to a reduction of 43,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions per year.
That's a local example right there of how using natural gas in place of diesel will improve air quality, because of the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. Those emission reductions will of course increase as we expand to future phases, assuming that all of the LNG we're producing is being used to displace diesel, so the numbers can be calculated similarly for the plants that we're building in Edmonton and Chilliwack, as well as for future infrastructure that we plan to build across Canada.