It's a very good point. As part of our international marketing and as part of the prospects we're talking about, if we look at Turkey, Jordan, and other countries such as Poland, they're all very interested exactly for that reason: not to be so dependent on the supply of fuel, which is controlled, basically, by the United States and France.
An additional line of business that the CANDU industry can really work to is the use of thorium as a fuel—instead of uranium—which is much more broadly distributed around the world. It would bring a new source of usage of the fuel.
Another venue that is being discussed is to use some of the spent fuel from other technologies, which would allow the control of waste from the light water reactors, to be used in the fuels of the CANDU technology. So there are other venues to look at in the future; there are other things to be developed. That's why we're standing behind the CANDU technology and process and AECL for the future.