But only in the beginning.
I don't have those exact numbers with me, Mr. Allen, but I can get them for you. If you take that out over the vast number of consumers there are across the country, it's a very, very small increment in terms of the cost of our energy that we use every day in our homes and in our cars. It's much, much smaller than we think it is.
Recently, in the last few years, gasoline prices have tripled. Did anybody stop driving their cars? No, they didn't. So I don't think that in the end the consumer is going to be vastly affected by the cost to capture our carbon. But we do need the government to get on board with this so we can get it started. In the end, the consumers will be willing to pay for it.