I think we could learn a lot from Sweden and Finland, which are on more aggressive net-zero road maps—Finland for 2035 and Sweden for 2045. They've taken a very full value chain, sector-specific approach to bring policy, regulation, legislation, funding, programs and tax incentives together. In Canada, we haven't quite done it that way. I just wish it were a bit more coordinated, to be honest.
In that, I think the opportunity is twofold. There's the mitigation side, as I said, where we still have some GHG reductions to take care of at our mills, and we need a better path with this government to do that. The other side is the adaptation agenda. The other side of the carbon story is that much of it is beyond our control because there is drought, pest and fire, which are creating a massive carbon problem in this country, and the national adaptation strategy that's still under development is going to be an important tool that we can feed into as well.