Yes, absolutely.
In Canada, the Canadian Standards Association has a sustainable forest management standard. There is the Sustainable Forestry Initiative standard, which is ours, and there is the Forest Stewardship Council standard. Just as we have lots of organizations that try to alleviate poverty or world hunger and just as we have many car manufacturers, many organizations and many approaches are needed for this problem to ensure assurance. All three of these standards are globally recognized and endorsed by global organizations, and, just like in anything else, different corporations will lean on one or the other for specific needs.
We have great strength in terms of our supply chain and biodiversity management and recovery. In our standards, we put a lot of research and investment into conservation collaborations to help recover species, which a lot of organizations value. We ensure that sustainably managed forests don't just maintain species but recover species, and we work with ECCC and others for that.
We also do significant activities in indigenous relations and community development. There are about 40 indigenous communities across Canada that utilize our standards, and we're developing more training programs to facilitate that growth. In fact, we've put out a specific indigenous module for indigenous communities to use with our standards.
Those are some of the reasons organizations work with SFI. It's also because we have a broad program with other services, such as skills development, job creation, etc.