Yes, absolutely. I mentioned earlier that it is an international management system. It's entirely scalable, so you can go from a room of four or five people up to 400 or 500 people. The Vancouver Olympics used this system. It's used in earthquake response and any kind of disaster response. When we do our tabletop exercise, we're responsible not only for the equipment and manpower on the water, but also potentially for managing that entire system.
When we're dealing with a vessel like the Simushir, where they might not have people on the ground, we'd be able to staff an entire incident command system, build an ICP, and incident command post, and run that on behalf of the shipowner. For the larger players, some of the larger oil facilities, they'd be able to staff those incident command systems themselves.
When we do the tabletop exercise, people in our organization take certain roles. There are different departments: operations, logistics, and finance. There's a unified command. When we do our training, we're training not only for an on-water response, but also how to operate an incident command system.