Thank you for the question. I appreciate that global perspective, because this truly is a global marketplace.
We are seeing, as everyone is, that wind and solar are becoming more cost-effective. The IEA expects them to continue to grow to about 6% of global primary energy demand by 2040, so they are going to expand their role. Nuclear is something that people are always looking at into the future, even though it's tough to get them off the ground at any given time.
We're seeing a substantial sea change in how they move traditional energy with LNG. LNG was a relatively minor product a decade ago. Today, it's meaningful, and a decade from now, it'll be even more so.
The unfortunate answer to your question, though, is where there are constraints and where oil and gas are not readily available, it is coal. It has been a very difficult fuel to dislodge. Natural gas has done a good job of it in a few countries, such as Canada, the U.S. and Europe, but in the developing world, it is an incredibly durable fuel and hard to displace.