I'm happy you asked the question, because I think the purpose of the committee should be to provide clarity to Canadians.
The safeguard for Canadians is that, when you refer to the $8 billion to $13 billion I referred to, any of these amounts—it's called production support—would only come into play, first, if you have the facility, and then you start producing and you're selling batteries retroactively. None of that amount today is payable. That only comes if and when the plant is built, when they start production not for inventory but for sale retroactively subject to all the conditions of the IRA, on the same schedule. If the IRA were to say that it's not up to 2032 but it's up to 2030, the amount would be reduced in the same way. The—