It should be possible to get there in 10 years. I will use the example of vaccination against COVID-19. If it is to succeed, it will require planning, people who can think strategically, funding bodies to prepare plans and, above all, a responsive environment. That last element is fundamental, because wherever humans are present, we might find competing land use agendas.
The trees we're going to plant will be the main resource for carbon capture for 150 years, which is the minimum we should aim for. If we want them to help fight climate change, we must be able to maintain those resources. That means protecting the land where they are planted from any other activity.
Carbone boréal's experimental forests are protected under the Forestry Act. No human activity other than research can take place there, and that form of protection is effective.
So you have to think about the land, production strategies and, above all, a long-term vision with indicators that allow for reliable reporting. If you remember what I said about the aluminum industry and the 2 billion trees, every year, those 2 billion trees must capture the 10 million tonnes of emissions that industry generates.