Yes, absolutely. There are people who do a lot of work on this who are not part of our organization, but we collaborate with them. There are people who can speak more intelligently than I on grid integration, etc., but there are business cases for charging suppliers already. People are making money at this.
In the issue that we're talking about right now—the EVAS and the future of the policy—I think one of the challenges this presents to those businesses is predictability. If you take away a policy around which many private sector companies—some of which also operate gas stations, by the way—have set their business models.... They've attracted investment, etc.
My time is up, but you want to provide predictability.
