 It's PDAC 2024, and one of my favorite resource industry professionals, Terry Lynch. How are you today? Great to be here, Tracy. I was wonderful to see you. You know, Powernickel is a company I've been following for what, a year, a year and a half. And it's got more followers. Your volume's always fantastic. Is it not? It has, volume's been okay. You know, we, you know, we haven't been able to make that hockey stick up to the right where we feel we're deserved, but, you know, we're getting eyeballs, for sure. Of course, you're lining everything up, and you've had a number of outstanding news releases recently, many of them technical. So if you could just explain that a little bit to our audience. This is Powernickel. Thank you. Yeah, I mean, I mean, generally that the technical releases would be confirming that we've got a major nickel sulfide discovery in NISC. We posted initially an original 7.2 million tons of an I-43-101. And then we announced our, you know, expiration plans for 2024. We started drilling those and, you know, we've announced some hits on there. So we've said this is our best set of expiration prospects we've ever had. And we fully expect to grow this thing. And we think Lynn Lank was 22 million tons and Voyager Bay is 140. We think we'll be somewhere in between there. And who knows how big this thing can be. For those of you out there, of course, that might be new to nickel, may not appreciate where you're actually located. Would you like to provide some of the most competitive reasons why everyone should be watching Power? So we're in Quebec. So Quebec is arguably the best jurisdiction in the world to be looking for critical minerals. Three big reasons. Number one, the infrastructure is already there. So we're located off Route North, so we don't have to create the roads. It's already there. We drive right to the site. Across the road is Hydro-Cobac. So we got that great green power machine right there. We're just eight climbers outside the town of Damasca. It's got a regional airport and it's got reason number two. Reason number two is Quebec's done an amazing job working with the First Nations. So in this case, our Aboriginal partner is the James Bay Cree, probably the most progressive First Nations in Canada, I would think, in terms of mining. And so the fact that the Quebec government has made them feel like they're a partner, and indeed they do share with them royalties, they're very sort of pro-mining. Four mines being built, or two built and two being built within 100 miles, 100 kilometres of Damasca, and we thought there'll be a fifth with us. And so that's a really big plus. Community risk is a big issue in mining. So with this situation, it's probably very little. Third big reason to like Quebec is that fiscal incentives are top of the world. So you get two for one exploration. So for every dollar I raise from actual investors, I get $2 to work with. And then ultimately as you get to the development stage, you basically have two for one development too. So you get almost 30% federally tax credits for equipping and building a mine, 25% provincially. So it's a pretty phenomenal package. So that's why we love Quebec. Of course, those of you that are more knowledgeable, of course, on nickel, maybe following what's happening in China, of course, and the Australian markets in particular. Would you have any comments on that? Yeah, I think the nickel market is a variety of markets, right? I think, A, the worst of it was last year. And we sort of have seen nickels ticked up a bit, coming from $15,000 back up to $17,500 or so. And I think it'll trade in that $15,000 to $20,000 range for the next 12 months or so. But generally speaking, the nickel market because of the Indonesian influx has got a bit set back because of COVID and the slowdown in the real estate market in China. So nickel's primary driver is stainless steel. So stainless steel is generally considered urbanization. So pots and pans, fridges and stove, buildings, et cetera. All that consumes a vast amount of stainless steel. So when COVID came, Chinese real estate markets slowed down. That was a big slowdown in stainless steel. So that led to a bit of a gloss in the market. So that's gradually being eaten up. I mean, people will be shocked based on the headlines you'd read. You think nickel demand was going down? No, nickel demand's actually gone up. The HHS supply came on, sort of overwhelmed it. But the nickel growth is continuing to go, and it's expected to eat that through. And then you look at North American nickels, a different animal. Most concrete evidence we have of that is Samsung's investment in Canada nickel. They could have bought that nickel from Indonesia, but they need it in North America. So they're stepping out to the tune of a $1 billion sales contract and a $120, $130 million investment in a very interesting project. But it shows you how desperate people are for North American class 1 nickel, and that's what Power Nickel has. So the nickel market has to be understood in that lens. And I say to people out of investors, your best investment opportunities, when you're going from bad to less bad. And that's what's happening in Nickel right now. Well, what do you wish that people would ask you more often about Power Nickel? I guess I think the big thing that people misunderstand is that if you look at our market cap and you look at the nickel we've already discovered in the ground, we're by far the least expensive, high-grade nickel sulfide, you know, expiration play in the world, OK? So I'm not comparing myself to Giga metals and FGX and Canada nickel, because that's low-grade nickel sulfide, a couple of billion dollars to develop. Different animal. God bless. I don't really know about that space. Wish them the best of luck. High-grade nickel sulfide is quite different. Our plans will probably cost 3 to 400 million. Our returns will be in probably 35 to north of 50 percent, so versus like under 20. So it's a different animal. So in that vortex of nickel sulfide projects around the world, I would argue that we're mathematically the best. People don't get that, and they should. Well, what they should get is out of all the companies that I follow, Power Nickel provides more updates on a regular basis, access to management, regular news releases. Dare I ask you what we should expect in this new year? Well, you know, we're really big believers in transparency. We don't try to manufacture like BS news. I call it. We actually try and put out material news. And basically, for miners, it's assays. So expect more drilling updates, more assays. We've got, obviously, we're doing the feasibility study with CVMR, and that's going to be a big part of our value proposition. People don't understand that enough either. And what impact that's going to have, we're going to become a nickel refiner, not just a nickel miner. And the difference, just to illustrate the point, LME and nickel right now, 17.5, nickel powder, 80,000. So where do you want to be? You want to be a refiner. So you can't get there from here unless you actually have tapped in or partnered with that expertise. We've done that. So that's a real edge for us that others don't have. They can't replicate. So I think the next six months, we'll see some updates from probably just after PDAC will get the benchmark studies out from CVMR, which will show that one of the big reasons we like them so much is that currently, as a miner, when you're making your 43-101, you have to do the engineering show. You can do a condensate. So making a condensate, you're making it for the old technology and the smelters that are available to you. So how Rio wants to receive it, how Valle wants to receive it, how Glen Gore wants to receive it. So that costs us recovery. So our nickel recovery is around 70% in our 43-101. And that impacts what your turnage is, because obviously your grade cutoff is impacted. With CVMR, we're probably going to raise it to 90%. And not only do we raise, we're going to recover more nickel, but they, their process, they sell iron, iron powder. 12% of our ore body is iron. That's a waste product in the condensate process. It's a paying product with CVMR. So we fully expect minimum 2 and 1 half, three times LME pricing for our process. So that's profound. As always, Terry, what a pleasure. Thank you so much for joining us today. Great to be here. Thanks, Mr. Drizzy.