 Energy fuel use in Hawaii, the slide that Scott showed you, those blue bars for carbonization that were kind of shrinking a little bit. This is the biggest, that's that blue section, that biggest section was the fuels used. We use fuels in Hawaii for various things. That top left section is electrical power, it's about a quarter. And the rest is transportation and some on-site use. Now the first time I showed this slide in this auditorium years ago, the electric sector was a third, not a fourth. And that progress is being made in a sector that is maybe easier to get at. It's monolithic grids, regulated utilities, and we have some statutory mandates. We have renewable portfolio standards which require utilities to use increasing proportions of renewable energy as a fraction of sales out to 100% by 2045 and now being interpreted to be 100% renewable energy, not by statute, by 2045. And energy efficiency portfolio standards. Now this is an old slide and it's up here just to kind of frame the difference. The energy efficiency savings were envisioned as part of the Hawaii Clean Energy Agreement initiative. We had a projection of energy use and they said 30% of that we're going to meet with energy efficiency. 40% of it we'll meet with renewable generation and 30% down to, so 70% reduction. That was the HCEI 2008 framework. Here's where we are, now the time scale is a little different here, but this is built up the opposite direction because we know the fossil generation we can build up that's metered and that is decreasing. The renewable generation portion has taken an increasing slice, that's measurable. The energy efficiency, what's listed here for energy efficiency programs is the measurable part of what Hawaii Energy has done and of course underneath that forecast line is a lot of other stuff like maybe the state's lead by example, model energy codes, price response, appliance efficiency. But I think in terms of our bending the curve, are we bending the curve question, I think you can say that in the electrical sector we are making measurable progress that is documentable and identifiable. To put it in a longer term perspective to get out to our goals there you might see the bend of the curve going down there. So far we're meeting the energy efficiency and renewable portfolio standards. But just for perspective and sobriety, putting this in the perspective of the whole barrel of all the different uses those same two bands of renewable energy and electrical energy efficiency look a lot smaller in the whole picture. And as the electrical sector gets to take less and less of the oil barrel responsibility we need to have more and more focus on the direct use and primarily transportation. So that's one of the reasons the forum has decided to focus on transportation. You'll see something else here today. And if I were really brief, I could have just summed this up by just the three points that are up on the Hawaii Energy Policy Forum metric site which we're doing well in the electric sector but we have a long way to go. But transportation remains the real challenge for Hawaii.