Yes, certainly, and it would be to reiterate an answer that I provided slightly earlier. That portion will be $100 million at a price of $40 per tonne on carbon, and as the price goes up, that $100 million will go up too.
However, that just looks at the total operating expenditures of farms in the four backstop jurisdictions. The amount they spend on natural gas and propane, and the amount of that expenditure on natural gas and propane that comes from the fuel charge, is where the $100 million, or the portion you speak to, comes from.