Thank you. I'd be happy to.
You'll also notice that there's the green construction through wood program, which was originally announced in budget 2017 under the pan-Canadian framework on climate change. This program aims at reducing the carbon footprint of construction in Canada and increasing the use of wood in non-traditional construction applications.
To date, that program is committed to supporting 16 demonstration projects. These include things like high-rise buildings and low-rise non-residential buildings, timber bridges, and those sorts of non-traditional uses. An example would be the 10-storey Limberlost Place, a tall wood building at George Brown College. There are three mass timber buildings on the campus of the Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, which will be the first nuclear campus to use wood as a structural building material.
These sorts of initiatives really help to increase the use of wood in these non-traditional applications and thereby also reduce the embodied carbon in buildings, as Drew alluded to.