I don't know how you classify the importance of that, but certainly we were very interested in it. Vince was talking about helium-3. Helium-3 is used in neutron detectors, and you can develop, using helium-3, very high-quality neutron detectors, but to build those, to do that kind of work, we need access to neutron sources, which, by the way, we can get currently from CNL. There is the opportunity for doing that at a certain cost, and there's encouragement for doing that. There are some very good people there who can give us very good advice.
I think that should be enabled, although we see the current new development that's taking place at CNL to be contrary to what we would have hoped. It seems to me to be going in the wrong direction. It's so important for us that we have that kind of access. I think the NRU reactor, for instance, was a good focal point anyway for work within.... I'm wondering now, if they don't have reactors up there, what will focus their research work and so on. I think you need something like that, something like a Candu, an NRU, or an ITER, something to focus research attention.