Yeah. Eric, when we look at the projects that we have completed, you know, those came with volume commitments and those were for the long term. So those are very financially firm. You know, as we see the oil price fluctuate, even when it dipped down to, you know, the $55 range, we really did not see a big change from our customers as the consolidations happen, certainly in the Delaware Basin. We saw some more of that announced today. That consolidation has created more of a level activity level versus what it may have been, you know, a few years ago when there was a lot more private equity type of producers in the basin. But as it has matured, we are seeing our customers and our large customers just on a continuous, drilling forward and, you know, frac spreads, etcetera. The other real big driver for us is, you know, asking about what does it look like, you know, prospectively. The other big driver is there is such a large wedge of foundational volumes of produced water in the Delaware Basin that when we saw, for an example, you know, we hit that record on Friday, the sixteenth in January, that was right before the storm. We saw some people drop some frack crews or pause some frack crews. The uptick of water that happens when there is even a small slowdown is reflective positive for our business. You know, we are not active recyclers like some others are. When that recycling may slow down because it does not have, you know, a frac crew to send water to, all of that produced water has to go somewhere, and that comes to us. So we are continuing to see large opportunities for large-scale projects prospectively and expect to, you know, nail down some of those firmly in the coming months.