let's discuss all of this further with michael bradshaw, professor of global energy at warrick business school. he joins us now from coventry in the u. k. michael godaddy with us once again. what do you make of this deal? how a businesses factories households going to be affected? and as you suggested, it's a compromise. i mean, a bargain has been struck. there's lots of exemptions and we must wait and see what happens if we get to a physical shortage of supply. if you look at the kind of measures that propose, i think for, for households, it really means that they are hoping on what we might call behavioral change. that people will take measures to reduce their gas consumption in the winter. i mean, these things are not necessarily hard to do turning down thermostats in improving the efficiency of your house in terms of installation of windows, not eating rooms you don't need. and so for the industry is much harder, particularly the, the energy intensive industries is already a degree of demand destruction as a consequence of high price. but most countries probably have in place a, c,