Could I also speak to that?
Every expert we spoke to, every group we reviewed with, established for the foreseeable future—10, 15, 20 years—a firm base of technetium demand. They also saw that there were significant ways that you could use new technology, with advanced spec cameras, to achieve greater utilization, lower patient dosage, and faster processing time. Introducing state-of-the-art cameras into technetium usage as it is today is a use of technology at the front line that is different from introducing PET, which is different again from producing TC-99 in a cyclotron. You have to separate the new imaging modalities, which are coming and will influence and change medical practice in Canada.
It may be that in 20 years' time there will be no demand for technetium as we know it today, but everybody has said that there is a stable market for the next decade or so.