Joe Mastrangelo
Management
Yes, Martin, I think 100% agree with your question. I think that's why you see the buildup in LOIs with customers, where customers are saying, I've got a project, Eos is my technology, I want to lock in the technology and my delivery, but I want to work through and see where the guidance comes out on. What I'm hopeful for, on the domestic content part, which I think is one of the more important provisions that we all need to understand. Everybody gets a 30% investment tax credit for installing storage. Then there's a 10% if you install it in an energy transition zone, so going to places where there were former coal plants that are now being transitioned into renewable energy, you get another 10% for that, and we're seeing a lot of projects that tie into that 10%. Then there's a 10% of made in America, and, what we have been pushing for, what we continue to say is made in America needs to be manufactured in America, not assembled in America using batteries manufactured overseas. So we're hopeful that that will come through, and that will be a big differentiator. What I would say, though, is around those tax credits, I think it's going to be a significant uptick in demand, but we don't plan the business around having to have it. It's something that will help us and incentivize customers to buy from us, but the underlying fundamentals outside of the IRA for demand are still there that fit in with the product. So the made in America, not only is it a tax incentive, but it's a security of supply chain when you think about what's happened over the last two years. The market shifting to longer duration energy storage and our product being able to deliver that variation of flexibility of operation, and then the long life of the product. We've got fundamentals underneath that need a market demand that's only going to be accelerated with the IRA, but I do agree with you that there is a little bit of pent-up demand as people are waiting for guidance.