What we're seeing here, besides increased fires and increased insects, is stress on some of the traditional boreal trees that we cut. We're seeing that stress on them. We're seeing that things are moving, but they're not moving quickly enough to keep up with this transition. The forests are not moving as far north as they probably need to, so we have to look at the economic and environmental impacts of that.
I have two questions. One is about the modelling you're doing of the boreal region now. The other question is about my region and the James Bay lowlands, which is one of the world's largest depositories of carbon, but part of what holds it is its first-generation wood. It hasn't been cut. There's the need to maintain large, continuous sections of the boreal forest to hold the carbon imprint. Have you looked at that as well?