I'm taking the position that you can use a very simple accelerator to produce moly-99. It's not an accelerator that's designed to produce neutrons. A neutron research facility is a completely different object. You're not going to do neutron research as he's talking about with the accelerator I'm talking about. I'm talking about a very focused, fairly small, fairly simple accelerator that you could literally buy today, for example, that would produce moly-99. It's focused on producing enough moly-99 for Canada. I think of it as being used to smooth out the supply. If the NRU is having problems, you always have a backup. As long as it's the same product, you can mix the two when they're both running, but when one goes down, the other one is there to back it up.