 This week we have the Sedina Mexican Army on site learning some basic seaburn knowledge to take back with them to ensure that they are able to respond to any seaburn attack within their own country. And my role in this training is that I am the lead for the education team. So all of the classes that we have designed for them were created based off of existing classes that we teach our Marines here. So they're getting all of the same knowledge that our Marines get at a basic level. I think it's very important, very relevant, because we could always have a natural disaster, whether it's an earthquake that affects both countries, or it could be a hurricane that comes through and affects us as well. We need to be able to work with our partners. We need to share best practices, be able to work together for response to the same knowledge to get there and work in the same way. And do the same without worrying that he doesn't know how to do it, or I do. So in this case the approach would be the same, to have the same knowledge and be able to work quickly on that emergency. It was all practical training, regardless of the theory that we also discover new things. In the area, for example, of evacuation, there are things that we didn't have, more than just one way to do them, to take them to Cabo. Now we've discovered a different way. This has applicability in the field of what we do. And also, that acquired experience is going to be transmitted to the young people who couldn't participate, so that they also increase that knowledge. In addition, as I already mentioned, the call for practical training has been the parts in which the staff has been destroyed in the installations. To arrive and enter a collapsed building, enter a real situation of chemical contamination, that has been very favorable and leads us to understand a little more the reality in a situation of emergency.