 When you talk about the impact, it's actually mostly psychological. Yes, there are the economic savings, yes, there are the health benefits. But imagine just like going home like we all do, turn on the lights. It's really just about having a life where energy is in the background. We start with small solar lanterns that just provide a point of light, can allow someone to charge a phone eventually. Then we have small solar home systems that are going to light up a few houses, also in a similar way, charge a few phones, maybe power a small appliance. And some of the biggest one might even be able to power a very power efficient TV or a fan as well. Like in East Africa where most people are using kerosene, they're still using stop-gap technologies like torch lights. They're walking to what we call telecenters or mobile kiosks to charge their phones. And then they go to like these public cinemas to watch football games. So people are still living their lives. It's just really inconvenient and difficult to access the kinds of things that we take for granted, I think, in the rest of the world. And then when you think about the financial impact, suddenly you're visible, right? So a lot of people are invisible, not because they're in the dark, but because there's no informational data on them. And so these are customers that, you know, if they go into a bank, the bank was like, oh, you're poor. And so there's just this label on them and they have no assets. So now they have an asset, they're visible, we have their payment data, and they have all the psychological freedom to invest in their family and their children's future. So that's the big impact. I went from having very reliable, normal electricity to having blackouts, right? And suddenly you're like, oh, wait, I can't do all the things that I need and want to do. And it was around the time of my high school exams. And so, you know, I was studying by candlelight, you know, on some nights. And so I think that was in the back of my mind. And then I went to study energy at Columbia because, you know, I realized you can't talk about wide-scale development on the African continent until you fix the energy problem. And just the scale of the problem is 600 million Africans without power. Our vision is of a West Africa where energy is affordable and accessible to all energy and financial inclusion, as well as life-transforming products. So the energy side of things, we plan on expanding access to energy across Sierra Leone and then Liberia, where we've actually just started operations for a few months. And then Guinea is also the market that we're looking at.