It's a complicated picture. I'd say that industry and provinces and jurisdictions are all assessing where they sit with their GHGs, what the outlook is, where government regulation is going to go, and doing things like stockpiling offsets at a cheap cost to be used further. Alberta is a really good example of some upset in the marketplace and how they're handling it.
Let me say this in terms of a recommendation that I've been making to federal ministers: Canada, with its footprint, should probably be looking at—this is the federal government now—its carbon footprint and going some distance in terms of carbon neutrality. Then it could offset that footprint by working with first nations and others. I would look at first nations province by province and at collaborating with the provinces under the pan-Canadian climate framework, but where there is opportunity, Canada should be purchasing carbon credits from first nations to offset the federal government's footprint.
We've made the pitch, as it's going to take some time to get this kind of policy up and running. You could buy from us and bank them and have a credit. It certainly would help us in perfecting what we do. It helps our stewardship work. A good chunk of this money, not all of it, goes into stewardship activity on the landscape and the seascape. We could cut those kinds of agreements now with Canada.