No. We've built provisions in for that, sir. At the end of 30 years, those schools have to come back to us in good condition. There are evaluations during the course of the contract, and items that have to have a life-cycle replacement done prior to that are part of the contractor's responsibility.
In tying in the 30-year so-called warranty, the goal is to encourage the overarching contractor to make sure that the quality is built into the facility at the beginning and that high-quality materials are used and that there's a reason for the maintenance contractor to observe how things are being done in order to make sure that the quality is there so that it will last the 30 years.
We have a process within the actual contract documents to evaluate and to ensure that we are getting a facility at the end of the 30 years that is representative and still capable of continuing. If life-cycle replacement was required at 25 years, then it would be done too. It's not an attempt to—