Actually, I don't want to mislead the committee. It's probably worth pointing out that there are only three or four countries that have over $1 billion. In fact, the European Union is in the process of moving to $1 billion overall; so it's a staged period of time.
The trend is that all of the global community is moving. Much of that, I think, is partly in response to better understanding and partly in response to growing and healthy insurance markets, which kind of move with economic cycles. It's also to be certain that their community is, if you will, changing the dynamic, and that's a factor of markets.
So there are a couple, for sure. There is an insurance community right now under the current act. That's the Canadian nuclear insurance association, the United States, the U.K., and another in Europe; so there are only four pools of insurance that we would accept as reasoned within the context of our act. There is a limited number, but those pools are made up of larger insurance companies that are globally based and have the assets and the segregation and the appropriate financial instruments to support the policies they have.