Yes, but I'd probably phrase it a little differently. We use scenarios because we can't predict the future. We can't predict the policy or environment that we're going to be working in, particularly up to the 2030 timeline, so we create a scenario.
We have created three scenarios to kind of give us a balance, a spread, if you will, of what's possible. Through that analysis, we hope that we can identify pinch points, identify things that are common across the scenarios, identify things that influence one scenario over another, and then try to understand the system a little better.