To our witnesses, thank you again for coming.
I want to follow along the same line as my colleague Mr. Lloyd. I represent an area in northern B.C., and we have a whole bunch of natural gas. Conservative estimates are 200-plus years of supply at our current export levels and current domestic consumption levels, yet we have this focus on renewable energies. That's laudable, but I would just say that it seems we're overlooking the obvious. We have this huge potential to reduce global emissions, if it's realized, to get our natural gas to markets that are using higher-emitting sources of energy.
I see this as sort of strange. Why would we develop a bionatural gas or renewable natural gas when we have fields of this stuff for the next couple of hundred years? It's a bit of a mystery to me. I could understand maybe blending some of these renewable forms of fuels to make that more efficient. That makes sense to me.
I will get to questions.
Following along the lines of what Mr. Cannings has said, I was on the agriculture committee for four years prior to this and saw the pressures already on food crops to be used for biofuels. That's a concern. What you're all saying here on the panel today is that there's going to be a dramatic increase, or there would have to be a dramatic increase, in biofuel production to really make a dent. That would mean a dramatic increase in the shift from use of food crops for biofuel crops. For Steven from Ag Canada to say it's not going to have any impact, to me that seems strange.
I have a question about the use of wood waste for fuels. We've all seen the potential. We've seen the burn piles that are often set fire to after forestry has come in and taken timber and different things off those sections of land. The biggest challenge has been to get those residual elements to a place where you can process them to produce something efficiently.
In the example I would use, we have burn piles that are 200 miles up the highway from where I live, but to truck them all the way down to a facility that could even do anything with them would probably use up any advantage you would ever gain by doing so.
My question is about the efficiency of using biofuels, especially this biomass that's normally in burn piles and would be considered wood waste, almost unusable wood waste at this point. How efficient would that process be, and what are the plans to make that an efficient process?