 Thank you very much Scott, and thank you and Carol and your entire team for really organizing this gathering. This is the 19th expo. I was not here in the beginning of the expos, but what I do know is even since I started as the co-chair of the Renewable Energy and Energy efficiency caucus, we seek tremendous growth in this expo. And I want to thank Scott and Carol, and as Scott said, most of all of you, because you are the folks who are driving the innovation. When I look around this room, I see the proof of American ingenuity at work. We have scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs coming together to tackle these really important challenges and make sure that we can address some of the big challenges we have with respect to climate change in terms of the private sector. It's really important that we have a public policy that supports those efforts going forward. I want to thank all my colleagues on the caucus. We have about 100 members. It's a bipartisan caucus. For those of you who are here with the exhibits, please check. If your member of Congress is not a member of the caucus, please get them to sign up, because this is a coming together on a bipartisan basis of trying to encourage what we should all support, which is encouraging innovation and clean energy. I want to thank my co-chair, Congressman Riker and his staff, as well as Sarah Shedding and my staff, and you'll hear a little bit, I think, from the Senate. Co-chair is Jack Reed and Mike Graeper. This is a bipartisan, my-care role effort. Let me just close with the point Scott made. He gave you the numbers. We have huge and growing potential in the area of clean energy. I'm very proud of my state of Maryland. We're working very hard. If you look at solar, for example, the rate of job growth in the solar industry is 13 times the average rate of job growth in the economy. And that's true in many of the other sectors that are represented here today. So when people talk about the costs of dealing with climate change, my response is always to hold. Number one, the costs of doing nothing are huge because the costs of having to deal with all the consequences of climate change are going to far outweigh any costs of dealing with in the public policy side. And secondly, costs is the wrong way to think about it because there are, as you represent, huge opportunities for our economy and for American workers if we move forward and play a leadership role in the United States in dealing with clean energy. We need to be the leaders. You will need to be in the private sector. Our job in the United States is to make sure that we have public policy in place that makes your work easier, not harder. And it's been a great partnership working with all of you and we look forward in years ahead to doing even more great work together. But let me just end where I started, which is looking out across this room. It really is a celebration of the great work that's being done, the investments that are being made. And at the same time, you're doing good things for your businesses. You're also doing good things for our broader economy and doing good things to try to address all the risks and negative consequences of climate change. So thank you for being winners across the board. And we look forward to next year, we will make it two decades of this expo with many more to come. So thank you all very much for all you do.