I think there are two different ways to interpret their announcement.
First, it shows that governments are supporting their aluminum industry. The Canadian government has been doing so for a long time, as has the Quebec government. The U.S. government has also begun to do so through its very powerful Inflation Reduction Act. The fact that this highly important job-rich industry is being maintained by the government is therefore no longer just a Canadian anomaly, because the U.S. government is doing it too.
The second thing that needs to be pointed out echoes what I was saying earlier. When Century Aluminum says that it is going to produce green aluminum, it's oversimplifying. What it really means is that instead of using electricity from coal power plants, as it is doing now, Century Aluminum will switch to using renewable energy, and will be receiving support to do so. In Saguenay, on the other hand, we've already been using renewable energy for 100 years, in the form of hydroelectricity.
As I was saying earlier, through ELYSIS, we are going to try to restore our competitive advantage to an even greater extent. To the best of my knowledge, Century Aluminum will not be using an electrolysis process like ELYSIS. It will use carbon electrodes. That means a production process like the one we are currently using in Saguenay. They're trying to catch up to us. That means that we need to continue to move forward, and that's precisely what ELYSIS will enable us to do.