Benjamin Crespy: It’s Benjamin speaking. So I think we — of course, we cannot be too much precise on that respect. What I think we mentioned earlier in the previous answer that it’s much cheaper than a greenfield, and we are talking 50x less than a greenfield project. So that’s the level of detail we are going to be able to be into. We don’t want to be so precise in that respect.
Javier López Madrid: But I mean, very cheap in terms of — I mean we can — one of the things that we are and actually is — our global footprint is becoming more and more valuable as the world is deglobalizing a bit. We can restart facilities very quickly and very cheaply. And that’s — and we’ve — and that’s why it allows us to react to market, anticipate market movements in a much more agile way. One, we did that in Selma in Alabama. Last year, we’ve done that in Polokwane. In the reverse, we’re stopping production — we’ve stopped production in Spain, and we’re stopping production for 3 months in France. And that is a tremendous advantage for the world we live in.
Operator: We will take our next question. The question comes from the line of Lucas Pipes from B. Riley Securities.
Lucas Pipes: I wanted to ask a bit on for — we’re halfway through the quarter. How are volumes holding up so far? What are your volume expectations for the fourth quarter in light of the uncertainty on the macro front? I would appreciate your color there.
Unidentified Company Representative: Yes, thanks, Lucas. That I have highlighted a little bit earlier, there’s a number of factors that are playing into the marketplace right now, and we’ve seen this correction on supply and demand. But in general, we’re — most of the market is out of summer slowdown. There is a slight but yet cautious order load coming through in quarter 4. We see it still playing favorably out according to our expectations. Now the real area that we’re sitting at right now is looking at how we commit and how we conclude successfully the remaining part of our negotiations for next year. But of course, I cannot comment too much further on that, but that’s driving a lot of the current purchasing posture for fourth quarter.
Lucas Pipes: Okay. And for the expectations today, we expect a modest increase in volumes across the 3 segments? Is that reasonable? Or can you elaborate on that?
Unidentified Company Representative: Well, we’ve made the curtailments in Spain. So essentially, we are operating just with our U.S. assets and part of the Spanish assets, the French assets, our Norwegian assets. We focused on the successful start-up of South Africa. Argentina also continues to be a good provider to that franchise.
Lucas Pipes: Okay. That’s helpful. And then a bigger picture question, but the aluminum makers have been — western aluminum makers have been lobbying for a ban of Russian aluminum on the LME, for example. So Russian material continues to come in. And what is the impact of that material on GSM? Do you — does that ultimately directly compete with you as well? Or do fabricators take aluminum from the LME, for example, your material and then produce the demanded blends and alloys for the end consumer? Just trying to understand the market dynamics around the aluminum demand side of the equation a little bit better.
Unidentified Company Representative: Yes. So your question is specifically around the aluminum sector into the U.S., if I understood your question, right?
Lucas Pipes: Not just the U.S., Europe — Europe as well.
Unidentified Company Representative: Yes.
Lucas Pipes: And the interplay with production in Europe, in the U.S. vis-a-vis inputs of Russian aluminum material effectively, if Europe — if Europe buys Russian aluminum, do they still buy the alloys from you to make those specified alloys? Or does the Russian aluminum come with grades of alloys that already meet customer specifications?