First of all, thank you very much for remembering our very positive anniversary. I just wanted to point out that this is also part of the success of our alliance that has over years helped and supported Poland in our efforts to become a member of NATO and the EU. We should extend our thanks to all our friends who have not lost the faith and supported Poland during this time.
In relation to your question—and let me put it this way—a lot of energy infrastructure is in place. The problem is that the European energy market is not fully integrated. For example, if you look at the LNG infrastructure, it is already in place. We have, as far as I remember, close to 20 [Inaudible--Editor] plants in all of Europe, but not a lot of the potential volume is used today. When discussing the possible scenarios in Europe right now, we looked at the costly infrastructure in place. We now have interconnective systems and integrated corridors that will take us from, for example, Spain, which has potential in this respect, to Poland, for example, and farther to Ukraine.
What the European Union is looking at right now is trying to discuss options, how to streamline and accelerate the development of infrastructure that was either considered or done at certain stages so that we can fully integrate the internal market in the EU. Ukraine is also a big challenge in terms of cost and investment. I understand that there is a lot of investment already, of funding already generated by international organizations, that also goes to the development of infrastructure in Ukraine. I hope this will ensure there is some progress in the development of infrastructure and that there will be critical energy infrastructure in Ukraine in quite a short period of time, because this is what is needed right now.