There may be two ways to answer that.
The first, perhaps, is in terms of the process, how you can apply and receive a credit and what is being envisaged there. Effectively, there is a pre-approval process in which all proponents who want to access this investment tax credit—all investors—have to submit their project plans to the Department of Natural Resources. Then, as we were discussing earlier, those project plans will be evaluated to determine to what extent the project is going to eligible versus ineligible uses and the equipment is meeting the requirements of CCUS.
Then further to that, as we discussed, there's a regime to ensure that the credit is apportioned between eligible and ineligible uses. Finally I would say, of course, given that this is a tax program, that the CRA will have a number of controls and verification mechanisms in place, as they do for all other tax programs, to verify that ultimately the investments are being dedicated to their intended use. Of course, if they are not, well, then there is recapture. There are consequences for that.