No, those are independent irrigation districts. They are owned collectively by the major irrigators, and Mr. Casola can speak more to the deal structure if we need to.
Those represent, to us, non-governmental sources of funding that are not traditional grant funding. It's going to be paid back, of course, through the increased yield and increased arable lands that are opened up and the production of that land. It's about new revenues that will pay for that through the irrigation districts. That is absolutely, in our mind, a form of private capital that is separate and apart from traditional grants.