May I add something?
At the international level, based on the technological changes already made by other governments, we can say — and virtually everyone agrees — that we have the technology. We wonder whether we'll be using nuclear energy, renewable energy or fossil fuels to capture emissions. I wrote a book in which I looked at the opinions of the experts from World Energy Assessment, the International Energy Agency and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. All those organizations and their experts agreed that, yes, we could do a lot with nuclear energy and with renewable energies, as well as with fossil fuels, to clean up emissions. The most interesting question is who will make more money than everyone else during the transition to a clean energy system. When you talk about greenhouse gas emissions capture, about the clean use of fossil fuels, as Mr. Page has just said, we don't yet have a power station that can use those technologies. All those technologies,
gasification of fossil fuels, the burying of CO2, the transport of CO2 by pipeline--all of these technologies
were used for decades in other activities, chemicals, etc. We have a lot of trust in those technologies; the point is simply to bring them together in a different way.