You can't stockpile molybdenum-99. Its half-life is six days. Half of it's gone after six days. So you cannot stockpile it, which is why you have to have a local domestic production facility.
The Australians are just coming online with their facility. Because they're so far from everywhere, they have no choice. And they're expanding to supply the Asia region.
Hospitals now are dependent on wherever they can get it. There's going to be another shutdown of the Petten reactor in the summer. If we don't get NRU back up by then, that's going to be another major problem. It's coming from South Africa and Europe primarily at the moment, but a small amount may become available from Australia.
This stuff is short-lived. You have to move it. You have to use it immediately. There's no possibility of stockpiling it.
We're not talking about refurbishing NRU; we have to replace it. It's 52 years old. You don't fix a 52-year-old car, you buy a new one.
We can build a better one. We can use modern technology. And we can support all the missions that are currently supported by NRU with a new facility and secure our isotope supply for the next 50 years.