Hey, Steve. Thanks for the questions. Good questions. So first, I'll go through each one in order. So first you asked, is FDCA and shifting towards that kind of product base part of the capital increase and schedule shift? And the answer actually is, in part, yes. It's not the only thing, but it's meaningful. So looking at these other products, one takes more time, right? So we obviously didn't expect to be producing those kinds of products off of OM2 when we originally provided our estimates on schedule and cost. And so there are changes that get made. I'd say, generally speaking, if you're looking at FDCA, that has more of a schedule impact than it does an overall cost impact. And then for things like carbon black and other higher-value HTC products, that has both a schedule and a cost impact. So those are a part of it although, again, they're not the only thing. They're not solely responsible for that. From a scale perspective, one of the things that's somewhat unusual for Origin, specifically as a chemical company, is that we tend to be more capital constrained than the typical chemical company that's going after the kinds of plants and projects, frankly technologies, that we are and so consequently, we have to adapt to increased cost environments by also reducing the scope of the plant, not just by raising additional capital, right? We need to be disciplined with the way that we approach these kinds of projects. And so consequently, in a higher-cost environment where we're going in general, right, which includes some of the things that we enumerated, but things like higher materials prices, obviously higher labor costs, energy, all sorts of things like that. As a consequence of those, we need to adjust by scoping down the scale of the plant. And so we expect that we're going to have a smaller-scale plant than the million tons of biomass fed originally. And we provide a summary of that on one of the appendix slides in our earnings presentation. But generally speaking, we're expecting by the time we're done with this plant to be at about 500 Kta of feedstock rather than a million. Sorry, and then margin. So for margin, we haven't given an explicit margin as a result of all of those things. What you can see is, on that same slide that I just referenced, which is in the appendix portion of the presentation, what you can see is 500 kTa of feedstock and we're expecting just under $300 million per year of EBITDA on that.