Yes, it would be my pleasure.
Wood has a negative carbon footprint, and when you use wood, one cubic metre of wood in a building instead of using one tonne of steel or one tonne of concrete, you reduce your GHG content in the building by one tonne.
This is all done through a calculation that uses an external and formal database that takes into account the entire life-cycle analysis of getting that tree from the forest into the building, so everything—wherever there is GHG compared to the business-as-usual situation—is figured in.
In Quebec, there has been a strategy of using wood in government buildings, and for these buildings, we're counting the amount of GHG that has been removed. There are some schools that have been built now. They have applied using wood instead of business-as-usual building materials and have reduced by x number of tonnes the GHG in the building. That's a way that wood can reduce substantially the amount of GHG in the buildings that belong to government.