We do not expect that, absent the NRU, one gets back to 100% supply when the NRU is up. The situation has fluctuated, for example, in the month of June and July, with Canada getting in the range of 70% of normal supplies or sometimes higher, sometimes 80%, sometimes close to 100%, and sometimes lower, sometimes closer to 50%. The situation will continue to evolve.
We are not in a position to provide definitive forecasts over an extended period of time, and I'll come back to the shorter time forecasts, because a lot depends on what flows back to Canada as supply from the other reactors in South Africa and in Europe.
On the shorter timeframe, Health Canada deals with the two suppliers of technetium generators in the U.S., Lantheus and Covidien. There, with some weeks' notice, we get a fairly accurate picture of what kind of supply to expect.
So I can't really give you a good picture, but we should be in a position where you're not at 100% but you're higher than 50%. It's going to fluctuate over that period of time, depending on a range of considerations, including commercial relations.