Arun, this is Alan Engberg. I head up the marketing piece at Range. So I'll take a stab at your question. We're -- overall, as Dennis mentioned earlier, we're pretty optimistic on the setup for going into next year. There's obviously been a lot of volatility and a lot of back and forth in terms of international dynamics on the political front, and we can't -- we can't predict what's going to happen there. Recent news this morning, this week has been positive. I think we're going to get to a good place. But in the meantime, I think it's important to note that from, let's say, an ethane side, exports are up year-on-year despite all the turbulence. And from an LPG standpoint, September year-to-date, exports are actually up, not up that much, but it's a few percentage points. When we look forward, going into just this year, next year, as Dennis had mentioned earlier, we see 700,000 barrels a day of LPG demand growth. And just to get into a little bit more granularity, that's 23 new PDH units that are still coming up and granted those are primarily in China. But it's also 127,000 barrels a day for LPG demand going into ethylene steam crackers. And then we've always got that res/com piece, which is pretty inelastic and is growing at around 2% to 2.5% a year. So you add all that up, and that is good strong demand. And if we look back just over the past year, 1.5 years out of the U.S., there's actually been constraints from an export capacity standpoint. We've been bumping up against the limit. And what we're going through right now is major export capacity expansions. So we're adding between now and the end of the decade, 42% to the U.S. export capacity for LPG. And in numbers, it's a big number. It's just under 1 million barrels per day of new capacity. We're confident, again, looking at the demand that we see set up for the rest of this decade being 1.4 million to 1.5 million barrels per day that export capacity is going to be well utilized. And as a result of that, as we mentioned in a prior call, we've taken on additional export capacity out of a new terminal in the Northeast, the Repauno terminal we'll have access to that probably starting late '26, early 2027. So overall, that lends itself to just, I think, strong demand pull on U.S. NGLs, ethane and LPG and for LPG in particular, we see propane relative to crude continuing to gain strength as we go through the period. Right now, we're at about 45%. That's higher than where we were last year at this time. Long-term averages have been around 60%. I think that's within the realm of possibility. So good overall for Range.