Thank you.
The element of the environment is an important aspect that the Boeing Company is taking on in a vigorous way this year. We're doing it as a response to some of our market access in Europe, but more so because we see it as a competitive advantage in the future.
All of our manufacturing entities inside the company are going to be required by the end of the year to be certified under the ISO 14001 standard. That's the International Organization for Standardization. That standard is focused on not only using less energy, fewer resources, and putting less waste into the earth at the end of the day, but how you can leverage that in ways that give you a design advantage where you're thinking in terms of your carbon footprint, from the design aspect all the way through the use and life cycle of the product. So as one of the internal manufacturing entities inside of the company, Boeing Winnipeg will be certified by the end of the year under the standard.
I think a government entity can approach standards and things of that nature in a fashion that makes them not punitive, but more of a competitive advantage for industry. Although I don't have any answers to offer, as corporations are being asked to become better global citizens and better stewards of our economy, you might think in terms of how we can do that in a competitive way that doesn't become a disadvantage for them in the products they're trying to sell and offer the marketplace.