Sure. For example, both the CEC in California, and the Massachusetts clean energy coalition have a lump sum of funds—I think it's in the $40-million or $50-million range—that they have made available to provide grants for microgrids. The typical parties that are looking to take advantage of these funds would be universities and commercial or industrial complexes. Connecticut, in particular, has a program in place that's community-focused. Smaller towns and villages within the state are looking for funding of up to $5 million per site to install systems that would provide microgrid-type services.
In different geographies, there are different benefits for it. In the northeast, for example, there is a resiliency concern following Hurricane Sandy. We are already speaking with clients in Florida and Texas, on the back of the recent hurricanes there, about building resiliency when storms come up. Grids go down, and if you can have individual communities or individual industrial sites that can self-generate and sustain themselves, the cost is.... Maybe it's a little more, but not in all cases. Sometimes it's cheaper to create that community microgrid, but in all cases it's the resiliency. It's resiliency, reliability, sustainability, and economics. All of the pieces have to come into play.