Hey, Anne, thanks for the questions. Yeah, with respect to the higher costs in 2024, we do expect those to trend down in 2025. We got hit with a number of things in 2024. Part of it was removal of the diesel subsidies in Colombia, but also just the increase of natural gas and we're a buyer of natural gas to generate power. And so, there were and just higher electricity costs in general just across the country. So, that impacted and we also have about, 75% of our costs are fixed. So, as we ramp up production, especially in Ecuador, these are all satellite fields right now. We don't have a ton of wells drilled in Ecuador. But as we move to more permanent facilities and we're starting to generate gas power in Ecuador as well, we would expect those units actually to come down, the unit costs in Ecuador come down and really to probably lead the pack as far as lower operating costs. So, we do expect that to decrease in 2025 and into 2026 as well. Looking out to 2026, we have guidance this year for 47,000 to 53,000 barrels. We're quite comfortable that we can grow 5% to 10% with this asset base. A lot of that depends on capital allocation, of course, we try to get the right balance between reinvestment in the portfolio and portfolio longevity, but also having that production growth. But as you point out, we have 293 BOE of 2P reserves. So, I think that's a great proxy for the resource potential in the company and production profile growth in the company. And again, with 25% of that being natural gas, a lot would depend on natural gas prices, which obviously we expect to increase in 2026 and beyond. And with respect to where we sell our production, in Canada we sell most of our production domestically. And I think what's happened, if you look at the tariff talk, obviously there's tariff talk in Colombia as well as in Canada. We're quite well insulated. If you look what happened to all of our oil in Canada is light oil, which is consumed domestically, a lot of it is diluent. And if you look what happened to heavy oil or light oil spreads in Canada, they widen both by about $1 with the tariff talks. If you look what's happening in South America, differentials are tightened by $3, Vasconia is up $5 to $2 right now. And so, and we produce 10 times amount more production in South America than in Canada. So, the diversification does help us and we'd actually be a net benefit of tariffs to the extent that they do come in.