and then have to get it back into the form that it needs to use for combustion. and that infrastructure cannot be wished into existence. they are only 600 ships that can carry it now around the world and you can see that industrial countries that need it badly may compete and the price may go up. so it's all a great idea, but i think it's actually a serious effort and it also shows i think the russians that whatever happens in the way this war comes to an end, if it does, that their long—term plan to have europe dependent upon them for energy is no longer going to be able to work out. nordstream 2 was turned off, the europeans are worried that they have hocked their future to russia and russia can sell it to china or india and lots of other places assuming the sanctions don't bite. but this is definitely russia's major way of earning money and it's a change in politics as well as economics. and it's one thing to divert the supplies to europe, but as jeff was implying,