It's US$35 per kilowatt hour, but my point is to say, if you allow me—I know the time and I'm happy to extend because I think it's very important for Canadians to understand—the production support is only if and when the plant is built, they manufacture batteries and sell them subject to the IRA and all the decreases you could have in the IRA. If there's no IRA, there's no support, so that is that. That's the protection. It's in the contract.
For the manufacturing of the building, as SIF has always had as its condition, it's $700 million out of a $7-billion-plus plan, and we only pay an installment based on the schedule of production. You never give a cheque in advance. You pay an installment based on the construction schedule. As the building is built, you disburse the money. That's what the strategic innovation fund does in all the capital investments.
To your question, if the plant were not to be built, there would be no liability for the Government of Canada, because then the SIF money would not come into force because it's for the building, and the $8 billion to $13 billion is based on the manufacturing and sale of batteries.