Joel Gay
President and CEO
Yes. We're massively excited about desal segment or the water segment, otherwise known as the core of our business that we've referred to as a cash cow. If you look at the revenue growth over the last 3 years, the gross profit margin expansion, the growth in gross profit and ultimately the growth in earnings per share that, that business has, has facilitated and it's truly remarkable. Similar to commentary that I provided in the past, this did not happen by accident. Yes, in fact, we are taking advantage of a positive systematic risk in that, the market continues to grow and we currently expect 2018 to be yet another year of growth. So yes, we are the beneficiaries of positive systematic risk, but at the same time, our product positioning strategy was overall back in 2015 and we sought to compress the standard deviation on our ASPs as a means of achieving a higher ASP, and we did that through negotiating exclusivity agreements with the various customers, EPCs, that we have provided product to in the past. And as you mentioned, our horizontal integration effort into project finance and we've talked about the financial product that we designed in Energy Service Agreement. We've been working diligently to unlock pent-up demand in the retrofit segment of the market, accessing customers who are otherwise liquidity starved in financing, an endeavor on the basis of the efficiency of our pressure exchanger, thereby improving the overall efficiency of the plan. We're keenly aware that this is a very new, if not, esoteric procurement vehicle and it's going to take some time even in the retrofit segment to convert the market. But I would tell you that our pipeline, if you will, is approaching what we consider to be a critical mass. There certainly is a fair amount of interest in the market for this financial offering, but we haven't struck first blood yet but we're going to maintain our business development and marketing efforts throughout the balance of this year as well as to -- into early next year, because, as I've stated in the past, I do believe that the Energy Service Agreement, which is basically performance contracting, will be the procurement vehicle of the future in particular as we seek to further penetrate water starved economies that are equally liquidity starved.