Our roots are here. We're not going anywhere.

We continue to have the same level of employment here.

The legal definition is where your principal office is. So we are now in line with what took place five years ago.

Even at the initial price, (the electricity cost) is way higher than the global average. Then you throw the new cost on top of it and that's why it got curtailed.

We shifted more funds to the communities in which we operate, versus solely in Pittsburgh, or New York, for that matter.

The days of people going to work for a company and staying there forever are over.

I don't think the economic minister would have happened to be in Pittsburgh.

We have people who, right now, are meeting with people in the government and union officials to try to get a better understanding of how long this thing might last.

It is one of the options. It is at a very early stage. Obviously, the cost feasibility of it is one of the aspects that needs to be ironed out as does the environmental feasibility.