It hasn't been noticeable on the federal procurement side. We have more mature procurement policies in B.C. and in Quebec that we see working. Maybe to give you some sense of the impact, I went back and looked at the UBC Brock Commons 18-storey wood building. It went up in 70 days, four months faster than if it had been a traditionally built building. In its construction, carbon pollution was down 25% to 45%.
There definitely are fewer big trucks on site at construction. It's a faster time to construct. NRCan has done a recent study on value-added wood and engineered wood and anticipates that there is an opportunity to move that production level in Canada from $4.4 billion a year to $6.4 billion a year by 2030. We're seeing companies like Nordic in Quebec, and a new Element5 in St. Thomas, Ontario, and Structurlam in your home community of Penticton. I think there's an opportunity to do more there.
Government procurement can help, but outside of the provincial governments, we haven't seen any noticeable procurement shifts that we'd say are making a difference.