Regarding the $40 million, we actually contribute to a survey every year for the International Energy Agency. These numbers show what energy work we're doing.
A number of areas—I mentioned many of them—are related to industry and priorities. We don't have a concentrated program in renewable energy, particularly. We haven't had that since the early eighties, when we had the solar program and the other program in energy. But priorities have changed, and NRC doesn't—
We look at how we can actually help industry meet the demands on them to meet energy requirements or reduce their energy use. As you probably heard from industry at committee, in manufacturing, one of their major concerns is increasing energy costs, and these are the things we work on. One is to use renewable energy and new fuels and so on to try to reduce their costs.
So we may put that in the industry pocket. That's how we can help industry, but it's not really renewable energy. We don't give—We don't characterize our work as alternative energy; we characterize it as industry needs.