You know, this is Adam again. And, I would say, no. I think natural gas is going to stay cheap to oil for as long as the eye can see. Specifically here in North America. And I want to remind everybody you know, when we got into the fuel station service segment, I do not know, thirteen years ago or so, you know, we always had the eye that ultimately there was going to be strategic value of vertically integrating with all of our biogas assets. And at the same time, we were really excited about the prospect of compressed natural gas as a transportation fuel. We always thought if you could take natural gas and turn it into an oil substitute, it was a good way to take advantage of an energy ARB. Between those two things. And I think that is going to continue for, quite frankly, as long as the eye can see, given what it costs to produce crude versus what it costs to lift that gas here in the US. And you know, as far as the uptake of the 15-liter engine, we are really encouraged by what we are seeing. And people realizing that it is a good answer to even if you are just using CNG, you are going to get 20% emission reductions versus diesel. And, quite frankly, it is disinflationary. You know, when you look at the cost of the fuel. Versus oil. Now when we talk about the quote-unquote slower uptake or why are not we there yet, it has been a confluence of factors of product availability. Where we did not have a Freightliner engine, which is, I do not know, 40% or so of the market. Until really just now at the recent ACT Expo. And, you know, the, and I think and you have also got now this macro environment where, you know, trade looks like it is a little challenged right now. So you know, we have seen really good adoption, and our base business is really around more, you know, recession-resistant kind of businesses. Refuse, moving food and beverages, and that sort of thing. Around the country. So when we talk about the slower uptake, it is really around those logistics and transportation fleet customers that did not have a product until the 15-liter engine showed up. And, you know, I would also say when we were getting into it thirteen or fourteen years ago, everybody was doing it for the economics. Right? People were not really as focused on sustainability or mission profiles back then. And back then, you were talking about a $60,000 premium for the 12-liter tractor versus where it is today. Now I think this period of uncertainty is also sort of healthy. And, you know, we think we are getting to a place where the economics are going to work on CNG versus RNG. And once we do that, we think we are also opening up a whole new area of growth where, you know, RNG today is about, what, 2% of the diesel market. And, you know, even if we do a fantastic job capturing all the biogenic methane, you know, RNG could maybe grow seven, eight, nine, 10 times from where it is today. You know, there is an opportunity for CNG once we get the, you know, maybe the price premium down a little more, which should happen scale. You know, once, you know, a lot of those for and there are some structural things we also need to address there and, you know, make sure there is a residual market for tractors when people want to trade out of them and, you know, a lot of those for hire fleets, you know, typically operate in a one to three-year contract environment, you know, and shippers know, that was the other thing from ACT Expo is we saw a lot of collaboration with the shippers that are hiring these for hire fleets that really want to see them transition into it. And they are starting to realize, hey. Maybe we need to do four or five-year contracts so that a five-year payback for those tractors can really help accelerate adoption. So we see a lot of positives coming, and we see a policy shift away from trying to make that one zero emission work for every industry, shifting and, people are going to lean in on it. So I am not overly concerned about what may be a short-term oil price move that shrinks the economics a little bit. You know, we think long-term, there is going to be a very attractive economic incentive between CNG and diesel.