My understanding was that with the initial establishment of the CIB in 2017 there was a very strict filter and mandate around the projects and sectors it could invest in. But over time, and specifically through the growth plan announcement in October 2020, that mandate has perhaps broadened a little. In many cases the devil's in the details here. You have a series of project commitments the CIB has made that are only commitments around memorandums of understanding. It's very difficult at that stage to assess the success and the specific model in the financing approach of the CIB on the basis of an MOU.
Their ultimate measure, at the end of the day, is going to be the two-times multiple of CIB capital. To date, in the 10 or so projects that have been committed to, I don't see a measure of that two-times multiple of the CIB commitment. But, again, we have to recognize that these projects are in the development stage, the MOU stage, and perhaps over time those details will become apparent.