 Can you please give us an update on your most recent news release about what's going on in the rare earth or actually in the critical mineral list? Okay. So as of the 1st of August, China has effectively banned the exports of germanium and gallium to the West. Some sort of revenge move against the US and the West cracking down on the supply of key semiconductors or chips to the Chinese industrial empire. A lot of this has to do with longer term strategic goals. In the short term though, it's quite oriented towards the saber rattling that the Chinese have been indulging in towards Taiwan because of course Taiwan is the world's largest producer of semiconductors. So the number of factors going on here, but what we effectively have is some sort of revival of the Cold War where battles are fought not on battlefields, but in tit for tat measures, expulsions and in this case, the Chinese think that export bans are the most effective moves that they can take to punish the West for restricting the flow of semiconductors to China. So would you mind giving us more of an update about what's coming out from the US government right now that's happening with for instance the gallium and germanium please? The US government does not want to admit that the Chinese have got them into some sort of stranglehold at the moment. The US felt that it could take actions against semiconductor exports to China and with impunity and the Chinese have responded by restricting exports of some of the most critical inputs to the semiconductor industry because gallium arsenide for instance is a very important input into chip manufacturing and so the Chinese are saying to the US and to the West really, you restrict the flow of chips to us, we'll restrict the flow of metals that go into the chips to you. So you won't have any chips to export and one of the problems is the industry in the West rather than governments industry has not built up stocks of these critical metals. This is a lesson that we need to look at across the whole critical metal space. Industries that use the critical metals are not filling warehouses with stocks for a rainy day and a rainy day is frankly right because they now have a situation where the Chinese have signal like a month ago that they're going to chop off the exports from the first about August and they've done it and most of these companies could not get in stocks within that time. They have no fat and so we're pretty much going to see a situation within weeks if not months that or rather months if not weeks where they are going to be shutdowns. They're going to be shortages because it's not a situation where you can come up with gallium and germanium out of nowhere in a difficult situation. The Chinese dominate like 98 percent of the gallium market. They have something like 66 percent of the germanium production. The rest largely coming from tech. So Canada is the big player for once in a critical metal and that is a tech byproduct production of germanium from trail smelter in BC. So take her in a very strong position because take of course to try and fight up Glencourt at the moment but you know germanium is not as difficult a situation because art is a non-Chinese production of science and from what I hear are groups like Traffa Goura. Traffa Goura have a big zinc refinery in Tennessee. They're looking now to start byproduct production of germanium as well. A lot of these metals not just these two but others have been sent to tailings by many large refineries and smelters because the price has been too low for too many decades but now it's going to be not only strategic imperative to extract these metals from the waste flows of these refineries but it's also going to be worthwhile from a price perspective. It's early days yet of course because it's only a few days since the ban came in but I would expect that we're going to see the prices of these two metals rise quite significantly and that is going to change the dynamic for the metals. So it's going to be more profitable for Western companies to actually reduce them. That creates an interesting new dilemma for the Chinese themselves because the Chinese have really rung an alarm bell. The West has heard the alarm bell and the West is responding by trying to up production. There's going to be a lag and it's going to take months. But at some point the West will become self-sufficient in gallium and germanium and at that point the Chinese have no strategic hold over the West. And so if in a situation that a shooting war begins with Taiwan the Chinese are not going to have as much leverage over the West as they would have if they hadn't taken this measure. Does that make sense? It does. And for everybody out there to access your most recent report called Let the Cold War Rebegin, go to your website, go to the following website and or reach out to Christopher Eccleston from Hellgarten Company. Thank you so much for joining us today. We appreciate it. Thank you very much.