Tim Go: Yes. There’s a lot of speculation on what will happen when Trans Mountain starts up. Of course, the published start date is still in the fourth quarter of this year. There is a possibility that it could slip further as it has in the past. But we are planning for that to happen. There will be some line fill impacts as they try to put some barrels in the line to start that thing going, which will tighten the spread, of course. We also tend to see seasonal tightening in that WCS/WTI spread in the spring when the spring maintenance activities come into full activity up there in Canada. So we’re not surprised to see the WCS spread come off from the $28, $30 dip to the, call it, $18 to $20 dip that we’re at right now. And we would expect that to hold in this kind of area here for the next couple of quarters.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jason Gabelman from Cowen. And we’ll move on to the next question from the line of Doug Irwin from Citi.
Doug Irwin: Just have one on the midstream side. Just wondering if you could just expand a bit on the capital allocation strategy at HEP. And I guess, specifically, around the potential distribution increase, kind of how you’re thinking about balancing the flexibility of being almost 2x covered versus also being able to kind of achieve your leverage target and maintain that going forward?
John Harrison: Sure. Thanks, Doug. This is John Harrison. Our capital allocation strategy really remains the same here. So we’ve kept the distribution flat, while we’ve reduced leverage. And we’re really pleased with the progress that we’ve made there. Happy to report we’re at 3.6x on a pro forma basis. We do have that short-term target of 3.5x leverage, and we expect to hit that in mid-2023. In the longer term, we plan to maintain leverage in that 3.0 to 3.5x, with a coverage ratio of at least 1.3x. So fair to say, incremental cash return is top of mind for us. And as we approach our leverage target over the next couple of quarters, we’ll communicate what we’re going to do in terms of incremental cash return to shareholders.
Doug Irwin: Got it. And then I guess on the HEP outlook, I mean, you’re already kind of squarely in the low half of the pro forma range you outlined after the Sinclair acquisition. Could you maybe just talk a little bit about some of the puts and takes for kind of 23 and maybe your ability to kind of push towards the higher end of that range this year?
A John Harrison: Sure. So we are we’re in the middle of that range already. So we’re really pleased with that. And that includes, obviously, only ¾ of the Sinclair transportation assets. So we have some room there. And also, we also have inflation adders to our contracts for HEP that really is applicable to all of our revenue at HEP. So definitely, inflation can be a tailwind for the HEP piece of the business here.
Operator: And there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Craig Biery for some final closing remarks.