I'll step back and just talk about the timelines for a moment as well.
In bringing something from exploration to an extracted mine, exploration is certainly onerous. As I talked about earlier, the odds of success are pretty low. It's very capital intensive. Most of the exploration companies that exist today are pre-revenue. They don't have earnings from an operating mine somewhere, so they're reliant on going to capital markets, raising new equity and putting that equity in the ground in hopes of finding something.
The exploration process itself can be very onerous. It could take five to 10 years to actually define an economically viable deposit through typical exploration processes. That's just the time and effort it takes to get through that.
If we were going to start to activate our industry today, take them to a particular place in the country and start doing those exploration activities to bring new production, we might be looking at a decade before we have that inventory we've been speaking about. That is why it's so critical, in our minds, to expand incentives, get those drills turning and do that type of proper groundwork.