Certainly. Today, an industrial concern like Air Liquide is able to invest in all those means of primary production. I would tend to say that we will be guided by the energy situation and the possibilities in the countries in which we find ourselves.
In Canada, and in Quebec in particular, clearly the abundance of renewable energy, in the form of hydroelectricity, is pushing us towards electrolysis. On the other hand, we are in the process of investing in and starting up a unit that will produce 30 tonnes of liquid hydrogen per day for the transportation market in California. The plant is located in Nevada and works by reforming natural gas, renewable to a huge extent, because we are fuelling it using our own fuelling technology for that type of unit, mostly with biomethane.
So we can assume that the next stage will be to capture and sequester the carbon dioxide produced, making it net carbon negative in this case.