Thank you.
In terms of scarcity and PFAS, making the link is not necessarily obvious, but clearly, when there is less water, whatever is left will have a higher concentration. PFAS don't degrade—well, they degrade a bit, but very slowly. There is the potential for the aggravation of pollution problems because there is going to be less water. The same amount of contaminants in a lower amount of water will cause issues. In terms of contamination, that's definitely one of the issues.
The other issue I see is related more to the variations. There are some periods when there's going to be too much water and there is going to be flooding, and there is going to be a spread of the contamination. However, that doesn't prevent the fact that later in the summer there is going to be scarcity.
It's not just less and lower. It's a higher variation that is going to cause a lot more trouble.