 Today, I have the pleasure all the way from Australia. We have Nick Erner from Alcane Resources. How are you today, Nick? Good day, Tracy. Oh, great. Really enjoyed being here. Thanks. So what's happening with rare earths in the market right now? Well, it's a really, really interesting time for the market. If you go out there and listen to people, they'll say, we know that outside of Linus, which supplies about 20, 25% of the world's batch of material, China has a lock on this stuff. And people are saying, OK, well, I'm being forced to do manufacturing in China through material supply. That's a problem for me. But then we see no action and commitment. And so what you have is the rise of a producer Linus, and then a whole series of other projects, including ourselves as one of the most advanced projects that can produce rare earth, waiting for NUs to say, right, I'm going to act now to secure my supply chain. So it's quite a dynamic time, and particularly, as you can imagine, with the Trump administration and who's doing what in trade tariffs, people are really watching closely, waiting for a signal that things are starting to break. And for those of you out there that look at issues like sustainability and geopolitical factors, this is the kind of company to be watching. So can you give us kind of an overview on what's happening right now with the Debo project? The Debo project? Well, our project is amongst, if not the most advanced, non-developed project in the world. Active goal business, but here we have a project that's state and federal approved. Mining lease is granted. We own all the farmland underneath, 3400 hectares, we actually run an agribusiness on top of it. Mines approved. So we could start developing today, engineering done with Hatch, several revisions. So we understand it's through to 30% engineering. This project could, with financing, be executed right now. So we are in a constant and continued push on marketing, looking for off-takes, co-investors, et cetera. And that is a continual tension as people look for value versus trying to predict the future. So yeah, for us we have a ready to execute project and we're really, really pushing to get a critical step taken. So correct me if I'm wrong, but it's my understanding that outside of China, when you get this financing in place, you will be one of the largest producers of these rare earths outside of China. Is that correct? Absolutely. Absolutely. Because at the moment outside of China, of any substantial nature, we have simply Linus Court digging up from the Mt. World shipping to Malaysia. That's it. They are the sole supply outside of China. Almost two-thirds of their product goes into Japan, the rest goes into China. So yeah, that's correct. We would be. And we're very hot for niobium as well, which you also have. We do. We do. This project, like a lot of polymetallic projects, ours in particular has rare earth elements, zirconium, niobium and haftium. So about 20% out of our revenue would come from niobium. At that site we're fully engineered to make ferroniobium product that we could ship into the US, you know, Asian or European marketplace. We have a business partner in Tribeca already lined up for that. They're an established ferrovanadium producer, plus a whole range of other stuff in Austria, in Europe. So yeah, absolutely. Niobium is a part of what we would do. All right. So we have the rare earth. We've just discussed the niobium, which of course is a critical material. Let's go back to sustainability and you have zirconium. Can you comment on that? Yeah, we do have zirconium. You know, and that's actually even a bit bigger than rare earth in potential revenue. Zirconium, industrial mineral, nuclear fuel rods, ceramic tiles, false teeth, very broadly used. A lot of catalyst, industrial catalysts. What we're seeing there is a lot of crunch coming on, the chemical conversion within China due to air, water and soil pollution within China. And so that market is shifting really quite rapidly for an industrial mineral. So people are watching very, very closely. What on earth is China going to do with it? Because some things, not ourselves, some have radio-nuclide side streams that need to be dealt with within China. And that's causing a lot of tension in it. So yeah, quite a dynamic market for an industrial mineral zirconium. So really, if you think about it, we've got rare earths on the move under tension. Zirconium under a lot of environmental pressure within China, ferroniobium, which of course we know is on the critical minerals list. We are a basket of critical minerals waiting in this project. So a lot of interest waiting for actual commitment out of people to deal with their supply chain issues. And of course you have the backbone with the production and revenue that you have coming in from your gold project. Yeah, that's correct. That's correct. So we're definitely a sustainable business. So what that means for investors is we have very little need to go to the marketplace to raise capital and therefore continue to dilute just to hold a position. That's not us. Well, I have to get you to add something on the half-nium. You guys got me so excited about what half-nium, the future of half-nium, actually spray half-nium on glass that can absorb heat. Is this correct? All sorts of things. If people out there, because we're talking to people on the internet, just go and Google half-nium advanced applications, they'll find computer chips, absorption of solar on windows. A whole massive range of things, but quite a low tonnage, so quite a low tonnage. Very, very interesting element. I think one of the really interesting things here is half-nium, the main use outside of an alloy for turbines and high-speed turbines and stuff, is actually the control rods and nuclear reactors. And here we are in PDAC. I just looked at a booth for Canada saying small modular reactors. Why aren't we doing this in remote communities in Canada? They all need half-nium control rods. So it is a very, very interesting element. And yeah, we would be the only producer of it outside of the nuclear industry in the world if we came online. So yeah, very interesting. Well, you're doing a wonderful job with educating the overall audience, global audience, on these topics. Your website is fantastic. Nick, thank you so much for joining us today. Really appreciate it. Pleasure to be here. It's great.