That's an excellent question. I'm going to take it in two parts.
I think it's fundamentally important, because folks like Tesla and all the manufacturers are looking for, one, trace provenance—that is, traceability—and a reduced carbon footprint. A part of the contributors to carbon footprint is how we move material all over the world. It's not the carbon footprint that went into the actual mining; it's shipping it across. We're shipping it overseas where they're doing the processing and we're buying back product, etc. It's fundamental that we move these products and advance these energy-efficient, greener mining operations.
I was also describing this from a critical materials perspective, and we heard something from all of our colleagues today, which is, how do we reduce our energy consumption? It's by using more energy-efficient agricultural equipment. We also talk about electric vehicles or e-mobility. Yes, it's nice to assemble a plant, but we're bringing everything in from everybody else.
Why can't we capture the technology and the spinoffs that come from it, which would then make the mine much more economic and the environmental footprint much more acceptable or reduced?