I think the principal advantage may be, as I said, the synergies with that Canadian Light Source. As I referred to, a number of nations that have built new neutron sources or research reactors have tended to put them next to their synchrotrons. The reason for that is that the science is quite compatible. They both can be used.... I'm talking about something separate from the medical isotope business, but the neutron scattering is quite synergistic with what a synchrotron does, which is essentially to use photons to look at the properties of materials, and you can use neutrons to study the property of materials. It's much of the same scientific community.
You can also potentially see some operational synergies in things like user support, IT, security, or some of the things that have been mentioned when we've talked to other facilities around the world.