Thank you.
I asked you this question, Dr. Zacharias, because I read an article earlier this week by Bruno Detuncq, who is a professor emeritus of the École Polytechnique de Montréal. He indicated that strategies to bury carbon are currently at the experimental stage and that these are very dangerous processes.
What stage is this at, to your knowledge? I saw a fairly alarming statistic that said that, to produce 10 million tonnes of hydrogen, it would basically mean burying 100 million tonnes of CO2. So I'm guessing that's not hidden under a rug.
To your knowledge, are these hydrogen storage strategies sufficiently developed to be both safe and profitable?