Hey, Michael, this is Tony. In our last analyst meeting, which was March of 2023, we talked about growth in the United States of, call it, 1.8 million barrels. I'll just go to oil right now. We gave you some basic metrics as to what happens with the oil. But 1.8 million barrels in the 23, 24, 25 time frame. Obviously, there was a lot of pushback when we published that forecast from all sides, including producers that hadn't looked at the number like we had. And what I'll say about that number now, of that 1.8, we said 1.5 in the Permian basin. Certainly, given the performance of producers during 2023, the producer community is on track to meet and likely beat those numbers. And I don't know how that changes at this pace. And then the combined growing wedge of PDP that a lot of people forget about in key basins, coupled with the continuous improvement in efficiency and productivity that we see from the producer community. So we'll talk about it more in early April, but I'll -- I think the clip notes now, what we know is, it's really going to be hard not to at least meet and likely beat that number as we look at the three year period, very much Permian dominated. Relative to gas pipelines we've talked about a simple metrics before for every million barrels incremental that you have with oil, you have somewhere in the neighborhood of available 400,000 to 500,000 barrels of NGLs. And for rich gas, call that anywhere from 3.25 to 3.5 Bcf. Okay. So you do the math, you look at what we have today and incremental capacity over the next two years is coming on is appreciable. Will there need to be more between now and 2030? Yes, the answer that yes, in some form or fashion. Whether it be brownfield, on existing pipes or another Greenfield pipe.