 Today I have the pleasure of speaking with Mark Billings from OXICO Resources. How are you today? I'm very good, Tracy. How are you doing? I'll tell you, your company is getting a lot of buzz. Over at Investor Intel Land, I'm getting notes and emails and comments online. So let's just start at the top with your most recent announcement about your second trade of rare earth ore from the DRC. Can you give us an update? Yes. So OXICO has a relationship with a sister company of ours. Both my colleague Pierre Gauthier and I are directors and shareholders of that company. And that company owns properties in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Over the last couple of years, we've done a lot of work sampling and so forth on these properties and have discovered a property in the northern part of the DRC that's extremely rich in rare earth. We're getting up to 54% to 60% total rare earth content just in the ore. These are not concentrated, this is directly in the ore in the ground. And working with local parties in the DRC, we're able to export that. So OXICO is the exclusive sales agent for Central American Nickel and receives 15% sales commission on any amount sold from the DRC. So as you indicated, Tracy, we've completed two trades over the last couple of months for about 300 metric tons of rare earth concentrates and are looking to continue that. We're looking to do another trade very shortly for another 250 to 300 metric tons and our goal is to ramp that up to 500 to 1,000, eventually 1,000 metric tons per month from the DRC. So I think this is a significant development for OXICO because I think we can save and safely say with certainty that we're one of the very few companies that is involved in actually selling rare earth concentrates worldwide. It's a very small, unique market, very profitable one, it's an niche market, but we've become a player in it. So it's very exciting for us. And of course, this is indeed very unusual and exciting, significant news for those of us that have been following this sector for a great deal of time. So let me just confirm, again, you are actually selling rare earth concentrate at this time, is that correct for OXICO? Yes. So the concentrates come from the DRC, from our sister company, Central American Nickel, and OXICO arranges the sales through our network and OXICO receives a sales commission on that. So yes, OXICO is selling rare earth concentrates today and we'll continue to do so. Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's my understanding as well that you are sourcing a great deal of monazite from numerous sources. Is that correct? Yes. So in the DRC, the rare earth elements are in monazite sands, which I think is important to note because some competitors in this space have hard rock, which you have to break that down and that requires a lot of energy and capex and so on. Our philosophy as OXICO is that we want to be a major player of these strategic and critical minerals and as such, we've secured some real estate in three jurisdictions. The logic being that we don't want to be reliant upon any one jurisdiction in case something happens. I think it's good business sense to have that. At the same time, these three properties, all of them represent what we think are significant amounts of these critical minerals. So over the last little while, we've secured an interest in Colombia in the eastern department of Bichada. So OXICO owns the monastic property, we call it. And that again, we've done a lot of work over the last couple of years and it's high amounts of rare earth concentrates up to 60%. In Brazil, we announced recently that we've negotiated a joint venture with a local cooperative and we have access to 30 million, 30 million tons of tin tailings. These were tailings produced over the last 60 years and a report was done in 2015 by the Brazilian Geological Survey and DEERA, the German Mining Ministry and essentially provides us with a feasibility study, a business plan for the extraction of a number of elements, not just rare earths, but tin, tantalum, niobium, these are all critical elements. And that again is tailings, it's monazite sands, again easier to process. And again, as we indicated at the beginning of this conversation, we have access to product from the DRC. So these are all on surface in sands, easy, relatively easy to extract. And we've secured all of those properties directly through OXICO or indirectly with our sister company. So for everybody who may be new to OXICO, you're sourcing monazite from the DRC, from Columbia and of course Brazil, is that correct? That is correct, yes. But we're also, because we've been following and I was just talking to Byron King about you recently and he was telling me a little bit more about your technology. You also have a very competitive technology. Yes, exactly. And I think there's two key assets of the company. And one of them is the real estate, which we just talked about in the three jurisdictions. And the other one is the processing technology. If we look at the Brazilian operations, for example, as I said, there's a study done by two governments in Germany and Brazil. And they looked at producing a monazite concentrate with a number of rare earth elements. And where they came up against the wall was how to extract thorium. And thorium, of course, as you know, is a radioactive element. And it's generally seen as a prohibiting transport. And it impedes the ability of a company to sell it if it is in significant quantities. So we've developed over the last five years a technology called ultrasound extraction, which is based on the same principle as if you go to the doctor and you have a kidney stone. The doctor will pulverize the stone with high vibrations and it'll break up into smaller parts and pass your system. The same principle here applies. We break up the ore into smaller fragments very quickly using this technology, which is all done at atmospheric temperature and pressure. And we're able to separate the ore into its component parts in a much quicker, cost effective and environmentally friendly way. And we've done a number of tests on these ores concerning the extraction of thorium. And we're getting thorium into solution, extracting it from the other elements. And we're able to produce concentrates that do not have the thorium. So that's a significant development because both in Colombia and in Brazil, there are traces of thorium which could impede the development of those projects. It doesn't seem to be the case with us, given our testing and the technology we have. Out of the DRC, as I've indicated, we've started to cash flow from that, primarily because there's no thorium in that area. So it's different in that respect. But I think the technology is just as important as the properties. And I think that's a defining feature of the company. If you look at some of the competitors in this space, they have interesting deposits with rare earth elements, significant traces of a basket of elements. But none of them has processing technology. And we hope that that will be one of the key defining factors of OXICO going forward. Well, I think perhaps, according to Jack Lipton, who talks about the desert out there for capital talent in the critical minerals sector, I would encourage everybody out there to go take a look at your website for the level of talent, of course, that you've got in your management team and all the off-take agreements that you seem to be announcing every other week. So Mark, thank you so much for joining us today. I hope you will join us again here in the next couple of weeks. And I'd love it if you go through these off-take agreements with myself or Jack Lipton. Well, thank you very much for your time. And stay tuned. There's always going to be news from our company. So we'll keep you and the investing public informed. Thank you for your time.