Absolutely, especially if the department revisited its response to our recommendation on linking tree planting with habitat restoration. You all know the old adage of not being able to see the forest for the trees. This is a perfect example of that. If we focused just on tree planting without looking at restoring the habitat or the ecosystem in question, we wouldn't be maximizing the benefits.
If the tree planting is done in a deliberate way, where the co-benefits for biodiversity and for human well-being, such as recreation, shade or mitigating urban heat islands and so on, are done in a deliberate way, instead of just looking at, “Oh, let's just meet our number of trees”.... An unfortunate scenario would be if there's a proliferation of monoculture tree plantations that aren't really forests. There are some natural monocultures in Canada, so it's not a case where you should never plant the same tree species on a site, but generally speaking, there will be more biodiversity benefits accruing with a more diverse planting approach. We have a recommendation about that in terms of dovetailing the tree-planting goals with habitat restoration.
That's become all the more important because of the Montreal biodiversity framework from the latest Conference of the Parties, where there's a new target—I believe it's target two—about restoring 30% of degraded lands. Here's a great opportunity, through reforestation rather than just tree planting, to restore forests rather than just creating tree plantations.