 Our association is the industry for the waste heat to power companies. We have developers and technology manufacturers, as well as industrial host sites and oil and gas pipelines. Waste heat is located mostly with the industry consumers, large industry consumers, as well as oil and gas processing facilities. Anywhere that there's a lot of energy that is used. So particularly if you find smoke stacks, if you're driving down the side of the road and you see a smoke stack where you see an oil and gas flare, that's a prime location for heat that's being wasted. And what these companies do is we take that heat, we use a heat exchanging process to generate emissions-free electricity. So the US Power Association is particularly focused on educating folks about the emissions-free characteristics of waste heat. So the waste heat to power industry in particular takes heat and makes power, which is very similar to what geothermal does, or solar thermal does, and very similar as well to general renewable energy. We make emissions-free electricity from something that's continually occurring, like waste heat. And even though we do this and we use the same technologies as recognized by the federal government, we actually are not recognizing any federal policy. So interestingly, my company, for instance, manufactures this technology. And if this technology is going into data on a geothermal facility, it would be given a 30% investment tax credit, or a two-quit-one sin protection tax credit, depending what happens with all these subsidies in the future. But if that very same technology, thinking the very same power, was sent to North Carolina on a paper plan, it would be given nothing. So it's a huge impact. Federal policy has a huge impact on this industry. We would argue that it's good to level the playing field, and so either have no subsidies for any kind of generation, conventional, advanced, or not, or make sure that everyone who is producing efficient electricity or zero emissions electricity is given the same kind of treatment. So because the federal government is in the middle of a presidential election cycle, we do have a bill that's been introduced on the House side, but we're kind of in a holding pattern, probably until the lame duck session. And so the HEDA's power association has focused a lot on the states. To date, there's 13 states that recognize waste heat in some capacity as renewable. And actually, last week, the governor of Ohio added waste heat to their renewable portfolio standards and energy efficiency standards. So HEDA's power was involved in that to some extent, worked with a lot of partners in Ohio, and we're excited to try to duplicate that model in the other states to help make sure that where there's heat being wasted, they're actually making emissions free electricity and helping those manufacturers have a new source of profit either to reduce their utility bills or to sell that power into the grid. HEDA's power is a resource for emissions free electricity and a new source of profit for manufacturers. And our tagline is HEDA's power, let's capture it.