Thank you for your question.
Regarding incompleteness, I think in terms of biomass and new renewable options, we don't go as aggressively as we should to collect the data, especially on biomass. There are a lot of different types of biomass. It's complex. It's wood but it's waste. It's agricultural waste. There are different types of biomass, but all of that biomass could be used and better valorized to create energy products that are renewable and that could be used.
This is important because we don't go and collect the data. Part of it is that there is not a big market, so of course, there is not a lot of money to be made. Industry is not pushing for that because nobody really cares. It's a farmer from whom you buy some logs to heat your cottage. That's a small market. The problem is that, if we want to move towards our environmental goals, we'll need to do the most from our renewable resources. If you want to manage, you need to be able to have the data and be able to monitor what we're using.
Incompleteness is really based on the fact that because we were blessed with so much oil and natural gas, and because it's cheap, we've overlooked what we also have in great quantities, which is even cheaper. We just leave it on the floor in forests.