I'll start with the second first. No, no Canadian agencies have contacted us. I had experience decades ago with Canadians who were working on fusion and nuclear, but that's a decades-old experience.
We are trying to interest large companies in the United States, Japan, Korea, etc., in adopting this. Our plans are not to become a Westinghouse or a Toshiba; our plans are to influence the direction of nuclear in the world. We'll get something out of it, we hope, but we're hoping that the profitability presented to these large firms will motivate the sales everywhere in the world—China, eventually India, Africa, etc. You could ask what good are these reactors around small villages, but the fact is that villages in some parts of the world are huge populations. Our goal is to do this development and catalytic investment, which will influence the big players.