On the point about being price takers, I know...I worked in the forest products industry--pulp, paper, lumber. You're price takers, and it's a commodity market, but what we looked at was this. We can't set the price. We have to focus on whether we're a low-cost producer. What's our threshold in terms of return on investment, return on assets? And frankly, for the rest, who cares? You can't control the price, so you have to make sure that your bottom line, your cashflow, is sufficient.
Let me come back to another question. If there was a way to accelerate the development and deployment of these technologies that will recycle water better, that will help us capture and sequester carbon, what could the federal government do to help you accelerate that, and are the technologies close enough to get into the...? I've been around long enough to know that you can have an idea, but to get it actually working technically and feasibly in the field is another thing, and sometimes there's a huge lead time.
What is the lead time we're looking at? What are the economics for you, if it was a level playing field? And how could the federal government help?