RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:To be certainI'll buy some of that. Assuming you are right, the production hours went from 2131 produced hours in April to 1713 produced hours in May. If you normalize production in May, assuming Aprils hours to get to 4138 e3m3/d or a m/m decline of 2.6% or a respectable ~33% annualized. This is obviously a rudimentary way to look at it and should be the most conservative estimate. May was the second highest total hours produced in a month, second to April. Only 30 more days until June's production is available.