Yes, like Aldyen, I have no issues whatsoever in using the marketplace, whether it's national or global, in supporting environmental attributes that are also commercially feasible. In fact, in my intervention, I made the point of just what's been happening on clean energy investment globally, and it's truly impressive. The CDM has not played an insignificant role in that. We've seen a rise from about 20 billion four years ago to over 100 billion today. That is a very impressive and very necessary trend that needs to happen.
One of the things the CDM helped to accomplish, notwithstanding some individual project issues, HFC-23 issues, etc.... We're all going to go through our growing pains. But what did it do? It engaged the international community--by that I mean in developing countries--in understanding that this thing, carbon, has a market value; therefore, you can do something with it, and it represents an incentive and not always a stick. I'm glad to see that the government has already begun to rethink this. They've included it for industry. Ten percent of its objective can be used towards the CDM. Frankly, I would wish that it look at this more creatively and ensure ways in which both the integrity and economic efficiency is gained.