A brief answer on how to solve this problem.... Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Very quickly, I would say that, one, we need I think a better infrastructure of information.
As you know, when something happens in the oil market and the gas market, we've been doing that for a long time and we know what it means. These are new markets for policy-makers and elected officials. It's not as easy to understand what they mean. I think that's one.
Number two, I think we really need to figure out how we put public money forward to support the supply chains that we want and not just put in money at the final product. That is a key part.
The third thing is that I think we need to have a much more honest conversation on exactly what you're talking about, which is, what is the ultimate threshold at which we say no? If we treat every transaction one by one and say that “this is not going to tilt the thing”, “this is not going to tilt the thing” and “this is not going to tilt the thing”, then you wake up one day and find that China has 80% of the market. We need to take a much more coordinated approach to what we want this thing to look like.