Yes. Look, it's a good question, Gerry. So look, for us, I'd say we certainly have seen -- we see cycles, right? So because we're so diversified at industrial layer, we've used this example many times with investors. A few years ago, I think it was 2021, aluminum bev can is a market that's important to us in one of our product categories. And it was a great year. Maybe still a benefit from a lot of people being at home and having aluminum canned beverages at their fingertips more often. And so there was a capital expansion associated with that. And then the very next year, that cycle kind of turned over, and it was a weaker market because of that. I wouldn't have said a lot of that publicly because in a way, we understood that it was a temporary capital infusion in that industry and then a reset the following year.
Ironically, in 2022, we saw a recovery in a lot of metals. Aluminum was a good example, where in 2020 and 2021, those industries have slowed down in large part because no one was making claims because of COVID travel restrictions, et cetera. And then we saw a recovery. So in industry, I would say, we've seen some pockets of strength from a year ago that have slowed down but are now picking back up, could be EV and battery and semiconductor, as I said. They're very kind of short-term cyclical ebbs and flows in those industries.
But overall, I think we would still say our demand for general industrial remains very balanced. And I know that there's a lot of out there. We look at them, too, that are the ISMs and the PMIs, et cetera, that point to some interesting areas of sort of strength and weaknesses in industrial, but we're not seeing a lot of weakness, frankly. We're seeing a lot of consistency and -- but we are seeing cycles come up and down.
But in energy, look, I think 10 years ago, CECO probably would have seen visibility to a similar energy market. But it's been a long time since we've seen the types of inquiries balanced across a lot of the energy markets that we're seeing. And that's both legacy energy that I think we use that term. I'm sure we're not the only ones that are using the term. When people think of upstream, downstream, midstream, et cetera, that legacy energy, we like that there's still a significant investment that has to occur in those spaces for a variety of reasons to maintain energy production for a lot of end markets, not just for energy consumption. But now we're talking about a lot of new energy and new energy transitions, very, very, very rich.