Yes. Backlog is still extremely strong. And we put -- if you look at our development expense, I mean, we've obviously invested heavily into the operations to set them up for future growth, as well as bringing them online. So Perry is set up to have additional sections and be able to expand production pretty rapidly there on and be able to take advantage of these current market environments that we see today, not only both on the met carbon side, but also the specialty products side, and the demand for those specialty products is great. Especially and then also on the McCoy Elkhorn Complex, the ability -- we spent a lot of money bringing these mines online and now they're in a position to start generating their own cash flow. The additional growth that will come out of Carnegie 1 and Carnegie 2 now for these additional sections is very small CapEx. So our CapEx expense is going to drop dramatically in the quarter. And so that will help our cash flows out significantly, which hence why we're looking at the strategic events to unlock value. Met carbon prices, so -- and indoor thermal coal price carbon as a whole. The industry is quite volatile right now with the lack of supply in the market, the prices move aggressively, so met carbon prices went to record prices over in the last quarter. Now we didn't get to take advantage of all that pricing because ultimately, when you sign quarterly orders and/or certain orders, you have to -- you sell in your current market, now you take advantage of some of the spot market, so we took advantage of some of the highest spot market prices. Now I will say, on average, though, our prices are still going up, even though met carbon prices have come down a little bit with the reaction over in China because of the COVID lockdowns. When China comes out of those COVID lockdowns with the current environment for thermal coal, it's going to be, in our opinion, a very, very interesting market. There is not enough overall supply between the thermal and met carbon market to feed the demand that's coming online, especially like over in Germany, they started up their coal-fired power plants. They're looking for 29 million tons of coal year that they're trying to source already in this really tight supply market. That's why thermal coal prices went up. Their natural gas facilities have been put back over to coal because ultimately, the Russia-Ukraine issues. It's going to get -- I think the market is going to get extremely volatile and I think there's a huge amount of upside potential in carbon prices in general over the next year or two years, given the tightness of supply and the lack of capital being invested in the space because, ultimately traditional bank financing has gone. And so we're in a unique position to take advantage of that.