Yes, if we take a step back, if you think about building, say, a carbon-capture facility on a power plant, that's potentially certainly $1 billion, maybe $2 billion. As an asset, it will last many years—20 or 30 years. There is a policy risk for change in some of the financial assumptions that are made with that over the life of the project, and this isn't just a two-year thing or a 10-year thing. It's a long period of time. When our members are looking at making a business decision, the financial organizations that look to lend the money, look to make sure there is some opportunity to make sure that there's a hedge against that. That hedge cuts two ways too, because if set up properly, if the carbon price goes up, the government can make some money on that front.
It's a matter of building in the policy certainty over a long period of time. That is part of how you get to a final investment decision. Again, that's a whole suite of tools. Are there the right financial incentives? Can you get things permitted quickly? Are there clear rules now and into the future that will make sure that your seven-figure, eight-figure, nine-figure investment—whatever the number, the highest range—will get you through to when it's done?