Yeah. It's a really good question. It is a very good question. So I would say the following, Neel, in the context of my view on the on all the Gulf Coast pipes. There is gonna be regular seasonal maintenance as there is honestly, for just about every type of large equipment and machinery that we have. Utilities do seasonal maintenance. I mean, seasonal maintenance is just part and parcel of when you have something that runs twenty-four seven, three sixty-five days a year. That is typically gonna mean the shoulder periods. April, May, October, November, they're of a obviously where you see even in the forwards, week the weakest pricing. You may have, obviously, more impacts because now you've got this assets with more compression, and so there might be longer periods where you have, you know, some modest level of capacity cuts. So I do think that that obviously, you know, does play in. Obviously, trying to sequence it so that doesn't all cannot, you know, literally pull on top of each other and create obviously some sort of some sort of bigger issue is obviously important. But I look at this and say, look, our lesson learned from this and look, you know, I I think I have a viewpoint which is you just don't get mad, you get better. That's what you do. As you take November and you say, okay. What have we learned? So what we learned was we needed to be have incremental link for Gulf Coast capacity. So we have and we are. And that will obviously allow, you know, we under offset as it relates to just risks. What it means as we continue to see more and more pipelines, obviously, the the fact is the rate of growth that we're seeing is unprecedented. And that's really the issue. When you see sort of this growth rate of eight BCF over the next five years, said another way, you know, that is one and a half B's a year. Right? I mean, that's massive amount of growth. That is a pipeline a year, and it's hard to get pipelines built. We've seen that. They happen in clusters. And there's a frenetic amount of activity. Lots being talked about, but things happen. And then then there's catalyst. So obviously, catalyst, I think, last year was just how Waha performed and finally you saw obviously GCX get done, we saw, obviously, you know, we saw Blackcomb, you know, and we saw Hugh Brinson. So finally, we saw okay. We saw some activity. The pressure will build up again. Absolutely. Just given what we see, and you'll continue to have have this this problem. Part and parcel of one of the the ideas, but with the ops guys on PowGen. Is that's just in basin. But that's, you know, fifty to sixty million cubic feet a day, whatever it is in the context of that we could build a power gen plant and capitalize on some of this weakness. It's another way for us to create economic value for the enterprise and capture it within the overall company itself. So I do think it's a really good question and look, it's gonna be something that I think all of us gonna have to watch and we'll probably watch very closely.