high level nuclear waste, no chance of a meltdown, no special nuclear material -- material likely tony moore uranium, but the paper leaves some regulatory ambiguities, suggesting that future fusion power plants could be regulated like fission, which is a different energy process. i look forward to making sure that we put the right regulatory environment in place so we don't stifle that innovation as it's coming to bear. thank you, i yield back. >> the gentlewoman yields. the chair recognizes the gentleman from texas, mr. webber. >> thank, you mister chairman. first, i want to -- scott peters said, in texas, 40% of our power is renewable. that's just not accurate. you go to a.gov, you look at that, and in texas, it's 50% natural gas, 18% coal, nuclear is 8%, and that's 76%, i'm not good at math, but that leaves about 24%. 20 of it is when, and 4% is solar. so we appreciate renewables in texas. we do. but the real fact is that the renewables cannot be the leading actor. renewables can be a supporting actor. but renewables cannot be the leading actor. we found that out with winter storm uri. y'