I was at the GLOBE conference just this past week, where there was significant interest on the part of those companies to team up and use some of those funds and also to leverage private sector funding and university funding to advance that research.
I do believe we have a significant capacity to respond to those programs that are to be announced over the coming years. I am fairly confident that there's enough responsive capacity out there to bring about the kind of technology we're looking for.
One has to be cognizant of the fact that for many of the technologies I've described, especially the transformative ones, we're talking about it taking many years to bring them to market and to be scaled up. While it does depend on their level of complexity, it would not be uncommon to talk about five to seven years or so to bring these kinds of technologies to market and then to test them on a larger scale and, eventually, to deploy them broadly. So, it would take five to ten years out on the horizon to see those applied on a large scale, but there are also technologies with shorter implementation times for some of the measures that could be looked at. Methane is one example that I have showcased. The technologies are actually available and could be deployed right away and benefit the oil and gas sector.