 Well, hello everybody, this is Byron King with Investor Intel. We are at PDAC, the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada in Chile, Toronto. Today, right now, I'm going to interview and talk with Terry Lynch of Power Nickel Company. Good day, Terry. Byron, great to be here. Tell the people out there who may not know what Power Nickel is. What is Power Nickel? Surprisingly, we're in the Nickel business. Amazing. And we're in it just south of James Bay, hence the power. So we're expanding the Nickel deposit called NISC. And it's going great. We've got what we think is going to be Canada's next commercial nickel mine. So you're in James Bay, you're in classic old pre-Cambrian Canada. This is all billion and two billion year old stuff. It's the original magma that made the Earth's crust with some of that nickel. Indeed so. Yep, indeed so. And so what kind of deposit is it? It's an ultramaffic deposit. So other analogs in Canada would have been Lin Lake, 22 million tons, Voices Bay plus 50. So we had a historical resource of 3.1, but we've done almost 15,000 meters of drilling that we're going to be updating, we think, in July, June, July, and probably get to 8 to 10 million tons. And that would be the start. Okay. Now, as I understand it, there's two kinds of nickel. There's that laterite nickel from Indonesia, places like that, where it's all eroded by the weather. And there's the good stuff, you might say. You have the good stuff. We have the good stuff, the sulfides, yeah. So it basically can be made in a Class 1 nickel, which is what the battery companies need. And in our case, it's a much higher grade, so it's like 1% north. And that makes it much more environmentally friendly to mine and manufacture. So that's a lot less energy intensive as well. Another angle on nickel, as I understand it, is it's highly recyclable in future iterations. Is that a fair statement? Yeah. No, nickel is one of the most recyclable metals. And there's probably almost, I don't know, 20% of it of the market today is recycled nickel. And so traditionally, the nickel market, a lot of it went into stainless steel. You mentioned battery metals. Can you just tell people who may not be aware? What's going on with batteries in nickel? People here are lithium batteries, but nickel batteries? Yeah. So the core driver of the nickel market is still stainless, 70% of the market. The annual growth rate of 6%. It's called urbanization. As people move from villages to cities and towns, they're buying pots and pans, fridges and stoves, stainless steel. Right now, electrification batteries, driven primarily by electrical vehicles, but other battery uses, is about 10% of the nickel market. But last year, we had like 10,000 electric cars sold in four years. We're expected to be at 40 million. So it's expected to, by the 2030, to go to 50% of the market. So I don't know where we'll get all that nickel. Theoretically, it's going to be in high demand. So I'm just doing a little math in my head here. If nickel demand is growing at least 6% of here, and maybe more up to say 8% or 10% a year, the nickel demand is going to double in about seven years. That's what they're saying. Yeah. And I think they forecast from Wood McKinsey and other researchers or something in the neighborhood of 60 new nickel mines when we need it. I was just going to say, where are these 60 new nickel mines? I know where one is. I don't know where the other is. So you have one, but the other 59, it's up to them. Yeah. We'd like to think so. I mean, we certainly are well advanced in that. We think probably by, as I said, end of June, early July, we'll get to a commercial quantity. And that's always a big thing for a junior miner, because you're a zero in mining until you become a one. So you're just one of those guys with a hope and a prayer, and we know how long the odds are of finding a mine. But once you get to a commercial quantity, then boom, the market notices, and then all of a sudden you get valued properly. OK, so Howard and Nicol, tell us about the company itself. How big are you, share structure? How do people buy your shares, things like that? So about 120 million shares outstanding, around 30 cents Canadian or so. We basically are stocks on TSXV. It's also on the over the counter bulletin board and in Germany on the Frankfurt exchange. So fairly easy to buy. And we've had a good bounce back, I would say. We've gone from about 10 cents to 30 cents in the last two or three months, that's called a triple. That's called a triple. And people say, well, I missed it. And I say, guys, do you know that we actually financed two years ago at 25 cents and 40? So we actually just you missed the Ukrainian dip. You haven't missed the run. The run's coming. Well, traditionally speaking of Ukraine, traditionally, a lot of the world's nickel came from this place called Russia. And we seem to be having trade issues with Russia these days. Is that another angle to the whole nickel story? That is another angle. I would say it's more driven by the Inflation Reduction Act, which is basically the major focus on that is North American supply chains. And I guess in Canada, that will be very beneficial to nickel development here. Because you mentioned earlier about the lithium iron batteries. Well, it's actually lithium nickel iron batteries. Elon Musk was just doing his Tesla day the other day and he said the most important metal is nickel. So I really think that's the future is coming to nickel. Nickel mines have not had their run yet. And just like lithium's taken off, nickel's going to take off. So it may very well be that just because people missed the first leg up, there's still a few more legs, a lot more legs left in this run. Yeah, I mean, I think in this run, not just for power nickel, but for many junior miners, there's going to be taxers and 100xers. And it's been a long while since the market's seen that, but it's coming. People don't, people can't process that, the idea of 100 baggers. I mean, even like 20 and 30 baggers in the gold space or whatever, people are impressed with that. But in the past, there have been 100x multiples, haven't there? Yeah, there has been 100x multiples. And the cool thing right now is you can actually look at a number of these commodity-based companies and how much progress they've made in the ground. And relative to certain peers, you can see, hey, there's a 10x there. And then if they make more progress, you can see more. So this is probably the first time in history I can think of where there's been such savagely priced almost across the board. So, boy, if you're an investor, you start doing your due diligence in junior mining. Values are tremendous. You don't have to buy the hope and the prayer stuff. You can buy stuff that's already got the goods in the ground and still make a wampum of money. Well, thank you so much. Everybody out there, thank you for watching. Terry Lynch, power nickel. They have a website, they have presentation, TSX Venture Exchange, and the OTC in the United States, as well as Germany. Thank you so much, and we wish you well, sir. Great. Thanks, Brian. Great to be here.