Jeff Tarsi: Yes. Thanks. And we do continue to invest in our digital platform. And we think that our digital platform is essential to the total platform that we run in our Ag Solutions business. And if I look at our focus today, which is centered around becoming the most customer focused, being able to provide the most customer-focused sustainable solutions to our growers. And digital is going to play an absolute central part in the decision-making process. And this requires a lot of data generation, and it requires a lot of data mining. And look, for instance, if I look at our seed shift and the growth projections that we have around seed, a lot of that growth, an amiable part of growing our share in that seed business is going to be able is around mining data, collecting data and being able to provide that data back to our growers in a really timely fashion.
Also, we just finished I have just finished a tour around our complete Ag Solutions business basically since the second week of January and nowhere have we been and not any farmer group have we talked to that the discussion has not been around sustainability and sustainable solutions going forward in agriculture. And I can tell you that you are not going to have a sustainability platform without a digital platform. You have got to have it, be able to collect your data. You have got to have it to be able to validate that data as well on a crop basis. So, we do feel very strongly about this, and we are very committed to it. And very committed to it being a central part of our platform.
Operator: Your next question comes from Christopher Parkinson with Mizuho. Please go ahead.
Christopher Parkinson: Very helpful chart on Page 25 in terms of your expectations for production across the various geographies. Could you set on a little bit more on how this flows into your high and the low end of your potash guidance in terms of if demand starts trending towards the high end of your, let’s say, global range? Is that are those tons mostly going to be coming I assume presumably from Canpotex? And what would kind of be your baseline expectation for the growth in North America once inventories normalize between you and the other North American producers? Just any general framework on how that flows into the high end the low end to the potash guidance would be very helpful? Thank you so much.
Ken Seitz: Yes. Thank you for the question. Yes. We have the big supply challenges are the ones we talk about, and that’s putting a range here on what we believe could happen in 2023 out of Russia and certainly out of Belarus with the nimble, flexible supply being our own. But I will hand it over to Jason Newton to provide more detail.
Jason Newton: Thanks. Good morning Chris. Yes. As we look at the range that we have for potash shipments globally, the top end of that range, in particular, is restricted by the level of potash production globally. And so that’s really what caps that out. And if we look at the range we have for shipments from Belarus and Russia, that respectively expected to be down 40%, 60% and 15% to 30% versus 2021 levels. And so that really constrains the top end of the shipment range. And similarly, as we look throughout that range, given that wide level of uncertainty in shipments from that Russia and Belarus, there is a number of scenarios that can develop within that range that leads to the potential for higher production from Nutrien as a swing producer within that level.