 So that's just, we just wanted to sort of finish by sort of saying what were some of the take home messages we got from today's meeting. And I really want to thank Melissa Zhang, who's really done a fantastic job of taking notes during the sessions today and summarizing everything in a single slide. And so thank you, Melissa. So really there were two panels, one on refining of chemicals, one on steels and cement. In the first panel, it was clear that, you know, carbon synthetic fuels and sustainable liquid fuels are key for decarbonization. I think some of the things that we thought were game changers could be, you know, coupling existing assets with CCS. That came up a lot, although CCS, Copper Capture and Storage was really not enough, but it was one of the key ones. And then fuel switching to hydrogen was the other one that we heard about, that we heard about quite a bit. And then, you know, retrofitting oil and gas assets with electrification, which is the, you know, the subject of today's meeting is key, but it's hard. It's not going to be an easy thing to do, and we need to work hard on that. We heard a lot from Julian and others about the systems perspective. You know, how important that is, we can't just look at the, we finally just by itself, but we have to look at the whole system. And so we need to consider the supply chain, the downstream feedback, the regional differences. And all these came up in the discussion about, you know, how important it is to, when we look at this, to look at it from a systems perspective. In the panel we just heard about on concrete and steel production, we heard about how, what are the best ways to reduce CO2 emissions to greenhouse gas emissions was, right now, we should try and maximize the use of electric arc furnaces. I think we heard that about 70% now is now electric arc as opposed to blast furnaces. And so, you know, as we look forward, some of the deployment of CCS is still there to, you know, try and get down to net zero. We've had, we had quite a bit of discussion about cost that came up a lot. It's certainly one of the most undervalued challenges, sensitivity to marginal cost. We heard from Eric that, you know, just a few cents here and there can make a big difference in cement production. We should try and de-risk early technology. We should start looking at cost really at the, right in the R&D process, proof of scalability. And of course, you know, right now we don't might not be a cost for carbon. But as we look into the costs, we need to start thinking about the cost of carbon and the total cost of ownership. And so I think this is the last one as well that need for credible, transparent accounting and regulatory system to show decarbonizations impact on society. And that's, I think, applies everywhere. So those are some of the high-level sort of take-home messages we think came out of today. And thank you, Melissa, for putting that together.