I would say that if you want to increase those objectives, the best thing would be to reduce consumption here to free that up, rather than invest in new, expensive infrastructure to extend the life of fossil fuels.
The real question in Asia—again, there's a lot of research on this—is that it's not actually clear that natural gas exports to Asia at this moment would displace coal or displace renewables. There's a lot of action being taken to reduce coal in Asia, so it might or it might not. We don't know. We don't currently work those types of things into agreements—i.e., “You can only buy this stuff if you promise that it will help reduce coal.”
This is why, from an accounting perspective, I think there are some numbers you know you can track, and a bunch you can make educated guesses on, but if you have an international system, everyone's going to try to make those educated guesses to their own benefit. If we were going to do that for natural gas exports, we should probably do the opposite for high-carbon oil, for instance.