No, I understand.
Dr. Cooper, let me come back to you. Something that's confusing in this renaissance motif that the industry has put together is that there is some talk about 140 new builds globally. That was being referred to before us here even some months ago.
What I don't understand is that if the build estimates around the early 2000s that we're citing in the MIT report and others—and I know you don't like the MIT, but I'm trying to give us some sort of estimate.... We're talking about energy security here, and price security is important. What the industry site says, and I was looking at it earlier, and what the global industry site said is that because of the growth in the world economy, prices got more expensive for commodities and construction supplies and everything else. This is what caused the acceleration of costs.
In your research, you're saying that the alternatives during that same period of time came down, even though some of them also use heavy capital costs to get themselves up and started.
I don't understand why this confluence happened.