operating those facilities today. but i think as james said, that concern stretches really in many ways more to the operating reactors that are scattered throughout the country. right now, they've shut down, i believe, six of their reactors because, quite frankly, they don't need the electricity, but those reactors are critical infrastructure in ukraine, both because they supply more than half of the electricity or about half of the electricity in the country and because if those reactors were damaged through accident or through sabotage or intentional action by russians, they could release significant radiation throughout the country. so, i think it is a very precarious situation, and it's unprecedented that we've seen a country with this much commercial nuclear infrastructure in the middle of a war. >> it certainly would harm ukraine, but it would also harm russia, which borders ukraine. it would harm, presumably, belarus, which borders unique. i believe chernobyl -- correct