You're right about the California situation. There is now a court injunction against the state proceeding with its regulation, on the basis that it doesn't have the authority to do that. It is a federal authority to regulate fuel economy.
They're also waiting for litigation going on in the other states that are looking at California and are now on a similar basis. When those court cases are heard, then the court case will go forward in the state of California.
In terms of California, we should really be talking about going forward here. When we talk about alignment with the dominant North American standard, we're talking about alignment with the U.S. reformed CAFE in our industry, and I think Mr. Adams will agree with me on that. When you look at just how stringent that is, because it is an entirely new program, everybody has to do heavy lifting across all market segments and types of vehicles. But with the State of California, hybrid vehicles won't comply now. They just couldn't make the standard because it's so stringent. It's not technically feasible and it's not economically feasible. The U.S. EPA agrees with us on that.
So as we go forward, the dominant standard, as we see it, is a U.S. reformed CAFE. When you add an integrated approach, a broader, more comprehensive approach, to all these other initiatives that we talked about, in terms of supportive policy, that's where we can make some real emission reductions going forward here.