 Well, most people recognize that a lot of their lovely colors that come off their smartphones, their blackberries and iPhones are a result of rarer. So you don't get those vibrant colors from others, so metals, so you're often using rarer. And that's one of the kind of more, you know, general consumer products. So a lot of the electronics use the bearers. But more strategically, it's the production of magnets, burnet magnets. And those go into many applications, such as looking at, you know, we're talking about clean tech, things like wind turbines, hybrid vehicles. I think there's 20 kilos of rare earths in a primus. And so it's a lot, really, when you look at the small quantities of rare earths. There's also medical applications and defense applications. A lot of the missiles, they require rare earths, again, for very specific applications. Now, other jurisdictions, other countries, who don't have the resources that we have, do not have the raw resources, are looking for substitutions. Because we know, you know, manufacturers just can't keep going on without saying, oh, there's no supply. I don't have confirmed sustainable supply. So yes, other jurisdictions are looking at different options. They're looking at substitutions or recycling. Recycling is very, very challenging. Post-consumer waste recycling of rare earths. Because we just not, the consumer products aren't designed in a way that makes recycling easy, essentially. So recycling is something that other countries are looking at, but it's not necessarily going to be something that's going to solve that shortage. In Canada, we have the resources. We've had some identified over 200 deposits for rare earths. And we have a number of advanced projects that we hope to see in each production in the next number of years. But I said there's challenges with that. There are also other options to be able to look at rare earths that may not necessarily use, you know, looking at constructing a mine. We're looking at secondary sources of rare earths. So there are a number of places where rare earths occur, whether they be in certain types of mineways or agricultural byproducts or the fertilizers or industry byproducts. So we're looking for sources of them so that we don't have to necessarily go through extracting them from the ground and going through a full mining process. So those are options too. So again, a lot of times it comes down to the processing and how we're going to get through there.