 Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with Mark Thompson of Talga Resources. How are you today, Mark? Good. Thanks, Rosie. We'll allow me to start by congratulating you on your announcement with Shematal. I understand your stock is moving rapidly on the news. Can you give us some highlights, please? Sure. Shematal is a subsidiary of PSF, which is one of the world's, I guess, tier one global coatings and chemical giants. And so this is a very significant group to allow essentially us to go public with a relationship with them and what follows quite a long sampling regime. So, yeah, we're commercializing some products. We have a product development deal with them. And that seems to be the last building block of people in people's minds about the commerciality of graphene. Well, yes. And let's take that a step further. I actually read that you're looking at having revenue by Q2 of this year. Is that correct? Can you tell us just a little bit more about that? Sure. So even though it's a sample development or I should say a product development agreement, Shematal have agreed to buy the material from us during that program. So that will provide some income to Talga, obviously, very small at first and then hopefully growing throughout the length of the agreement. And then there'll be a separate discussion about commercializing that material. But still it's significant in that it's quite an evolution from just providing more materials. This is actually more of a, I guess, value added situation. Well, it is value added. And of course, this helps with corrosion. Can you just give us a few seconds of an overview about how significant this graphene commercialization process is? Sure. Well, first of all, what we like about graphene encodings is it has a massive improvement in performance. So particularly with anti-corrosion, graphene can outperform currently used materials like chrome that are used in these coatings now. So the ultra-thin and impermeable nature of graphene plus its electronic door, its electrical conductivity allows it to outperform a lot of other materials. So you get a really big bang for your buck by putting graphene into your coating. And you get a lot of leverage from that because you also only need a very, very small amount of graphene in that coating. Our tests have shown between 0.1, from 0.1 up to 5%, you can get these radical increases in performance. So this opens the fairly rapid uptake of graphene into what is a really large volume industry. It's worth about 120 billion a year globally, and the sector we're targeting within that is worth about 10 billion a year. And of course, lots of news right across the board for Talga Resources. You have an agreement for printed battery development in the UK. Can you tell us a little bit more about this deal? Sure, we're doing work with essentially split our materials and energy division up so some of the energy products can take on or be accelerated and flexible printed ultra-thin batteries needed for wearable technologies that are booming right now and set to grow very, very rapidly. So batteries that are much thinner than the current metal ones that are flexible and can be charged and be part of a flexible solution for all sorts of devices need something ultra-thin and graphene since that. So we've done a deal with a company in the UK to start developing their battery technology using our materials, and so that will be a really good test bed actually for that material to be used in other sorts of batteries and other sorts of products as well. And that's just one of about four major sort of initiatives we've got in the battery space. And of course, your shareholders are responding very favorably to your news flow here up over 35% since the new year. I understand, of course, you're going to be speaking at the Clean Tech and Technology Metal Summit in Toronto May 15th and 16th. What should investor Intel audience members anticipate you speaking about? Well, because it's a Clean Tech conference, there was going to be a focus, I guess, on the environmental and ecological side of graphene in product use. So this is actually a major driver for some of these graphene products. For example, in coatings, there's a lot of toxic materials that are used. And by using graphene, you can not only get better performance, but you can use a water-based system instead of an organic solvent-based system, for example. So there's lots of Clean Tech applications for graphene that maybe aren't so apparent. And so while I'm there, that's the sort of thing I want to focus on to fitting with investor Intel's conference. And of course, Talbot Resources has a very talented board and management team. And with your announcement of your new chair, Mr. Terry Stinson, can you tell us a little bit more about his background? Sure, yeah. Terry, John, as Chairman recently, it's a very practical move towards the suit our commercializing sort of space with graphene. So Terry's currently the CEO of a group called Orbital. Orbital has just recently announced a $120 million deal with Boeing Corp on drawing technologies and engine technologies. Terry's actually got multi-decade experience in the commercialization of technologies and engineering of new products. He's worked with Siemens. He's worked with very major groups and a lot of the OEMs in the automotive sector. So Terry brings a lot of inattentive experience on the commercialization of products. And that's where Tal does that now, that we are a vertically integrated mind to process to graphene product company. So the pointy end of that on the commercial end of those products, he brings vast experience to us. And it's a very practical and good appointment for us. I'm very interested to see what you announce next. And speaking of that, is there anything you could share with us about your upcoming next two quarters? Because you've had a lot of news flow in the last just month and a half. Yeah, and certainly that follows over the Christmas period being quite while things build up. And I guess there's quite a lot of developments. We have threatened a major resource upgrade for the Vertengy project. We have announced that we're doing some things with some of our cobalt assets and expect some updates on that at some point soon. We have, of course, these graphene products. We have four of them in the construction, in the battery, in the composites and the coding sector. So you can expect some of those sectors to have some news about testing programs, as well as potentially other sort of commercial deals. But right now, we've got a couple of those areas that we need to release some news about prototype testing and things like that. So they're the sorts of, I guess, it's pretty broad across all the activities of the company. It is a really, really active time right now. And there should be quite a lot happening between now when I see you in Toronto in May. And of course, between the commercialization of graphene, which undoubtedly your shareholders are thrilled about, we're being told that cobalt is right now where Earths were in 2009. And of course, Talaga has cobalt. Can you talk to us about your cobalt project? Yeah, in 2012, when we bought tech, actually, the Canadian subsidiary of tech to pick up some of our Swedish assets, one of the deposits that was a cobalt copper gold project. And it had about 105 historic drill holes in it. And a lot of that core is still available. It was drilled back in the 70s and 80s. So it's known as Sweden's most significant cobalt deposit. And we always figured that was part of the battery megatrend. So we made sure we picked that up and we've nurtured it. We put a few holes into it in 2014 and confirmed some of the numbers on it. And then recently, we were drilling for graphite late last year and we accidentally hit on one of our conductors, 85 metres of mixed copper cobalt and gold. And this is now given us, I guess, a view that that whole district is significantly cobalt enriched or cobalt fertile. And so we've been doing a bit of work to look at current ground holdings and how much cobalt lurks within it, basically, around. So totally separate to the graphite projects, but in the same area. So we just have an emerging sort of cobalt mega project, frankly, in the area that we are working on. And we want to work that up at the moment and decide what it's worth before deciding whether to keep it within the company or do something else with it. Well, Mark, thank you so much for your update. We look forward to seeing you soon in Toronto. Thanks, Tracy. Appreciate it. Cheers.