Vincent Anderson: And then if we’re thinking about Fortress, now that we are getting a bit closer to revenues here or earnings. Can you just talk about the relevance of the tankers that are used in fire suppression, what kind of influence they could have on the adoption of your product if they had concerns or consternations over change over time between your product and Perimeter’s products or mixing trace amounts of one product with the other? Is there just kind of a gray area in the whole process, I was hoping you could speak to their influence?
Jamie Standen: So comingling is what you’re referring to when you perhaps have an aircraft that’s going from one base to another and would be using our product after having used Perimeter’s product, there are standard protocols around how to rinse the tank, how to prevent any issues. I first like to mention the Fortress products have passed with flying colors, any corrosion testing. So that’s a non-issue. When you have some comingling, you end up with some residue in a tank. So it’s simply a rinse process and a reload. So we don’t view it as an issue. We think it’s very, very manageable by base operations for tankers coming into competitor bases and competitor tankers coming into Fortress basis. So very manageable. And we’re on the QPL and we’ve passed all the tests, so it should not be an issue.
Operator: And we will take our next question from Chris Shaw with Monness Crespi.
Chris Shaw: I’m just trying to figure out the higher production costs the nat gas in Ogden. You’ve kind of made it sound like that was spike that’s kind of over now, but it seemed like that is factored into the lower guidance for both segments for the full year. And I know obviously it impacted the quarter, but is it going to — is that — are those higher production costs going to continue through the year or is there something else that’s creeping up in production that I didn’t understand, or maybe I just misunderstood it completely?
Jamie Standen: No, that was a relatively temporary sort of episode, but it will flow through our cost as inventory is sold. And because our Ogden asset produces products that benefit both our C&I business as well as our plant nutrition business, you’ll see commentary regarding natural gas costs for both businesses. I would say it’s probably 80% skewed towards plant nutrition in terms of the dynamic, but you’ll see that flow through as our inventory turns. And that episode is now behind us and we also have hedges that we expect to provider us with good protection.
Chris Shaw: And then salt, highway deicing salt. It seems like — I thought when I was looking at some of the data that — the snow was particularly heavy in areas like in both like Toronto and Montreal and what Montreal might have had record snows in January. Are those markets smaller for you nowadays, or was it a sales commitment levels issue there? Or — I remember that in the past, I think they might have had some longer term contracts. So have their pricing not caught up to maybe where you would want it to be, is that why we’re not seeing an impact from I think, the snow that Canada’s getting?