 Hey, Pat, I see you co-heard some good news this week. Why don't we start with that news release? Absolutely, Chris. We had a $4 million award from the US Department of Defense. And really a process that took some time. We started conversations at Pentagon about a year ago. They were looking for innovative solutions to rare earth processing, that mid-market processing. And the solutions that they were trying to bring forward, they wanted to have as real innovative commercial fortitude. And the $4 million award was quite significant. It was a vote of credibility for everything we've been doing the last couple of years. And the interesting thing about the contract or the award, which is a contract, of course, it's an OT agreement, which means other transaction agreement, is that it's open-ended. And that means that when we get through the first $4 million of showing all the capability of RapidSX, our processing tech, there's an add-on opportunity to then get to a commercial level, which takes you to further securing what the US needs, which is rare separation in that mid-market. So that seems to be really good news. And how does that tie in with the facility you're building down in Louisiana? Ties in perfectly, because this particular award will be carried out in Kingston, Ontario, where we have our commercial demonstration plan. We're processing heavy and light river earth, which is nowhere in North America currently. We've built that plant over a number of years. We're going through the final commissioning right now. And everything we're proving out in Kingston will then get plugged into a much larger facility in Alexandria, Louisiana. And again, the nature of the add-on contract, if you will, is that we prove out, we show capability. We run multiple hours of product in the Kingston facility. We use all that engineering data and metric and whatnot. And we plug it into the full-size plant in Louisiana. And again, the US DOD is quite impressed by the fact that not only do we have tech that's evolved to this point, but that we actually have a building located in Alexandria that allows it to then move to a commercial path forward, which is really what they're looking for. And what's the update on that facility in Louisiana? Well, the facility, we've negotiated all the final lease terms. We're engineering with Metcambot of New England. And so we're working with, of course, Kingdom Process Metallurgy as well, but Metcambot of New England are doing all the engineering planning to look at a ramp-up plan from 2,000 ton to 5,000 ton to 7,500 ton. And that's X-terium X-itreal. So all that engineering is being done right now. We've got a very good space, meaning 80,800 square feet. And we're plugging the engineering plan into that facility now and moving forward. We've got a very precise timeline, a good team of engineering people working to get us to the finish line. So when this flag gets up and running, you're gonna need some feedstock from different mines. So what are you doing to negotiate the feedstock to go into this new plant in Louisiana? Brett, I can't share too much of the confidential discussions we're having, but we've got currently 14 discussions going on that are called the US friendly feedstock sources. They're all at different levels of production fortitude. And some are capable to get to the finish line by late 24 when we need feedstock and some are a little bit further on in their growth. That works well with our ramp up plan. So I think you know, Jeff Atkins, Jeff joined our team back in December of 22. And he's actually working quite actively on the feedstock sourcing. We're looking in obviously Australia, South America. We've got a couple of opportunities in Africa, Canada as well. And again, all the different stages, but looking to feed into a couple of sources for stage one, which the 2000 ton plant and more news to come. And how is the bank account these days to fund all this activity? The bank account will be doing just fine. How do we have this government money with add on funding coming up? We were in negotiations with several customers for what we call pre-purchase supply agreements. So they're looking to fund into the processing facility in order to help us get to the finish line with their construction. And then they have a discount on product once we start to supply it. We also have a couple of other debt and equity instruments that we're looking at currently to move forward, but we'll be well funded on our path towards that first $45 million US. Again, we've got government money. We've got some equity opportunities. We've got offtake arrangements that are in discussion. And again, more news to follow on that front as well. So we're feeling pretty, pretty bullish about our plan forward here. That sounds exciting. Now what sort of news can investors look forward to for this, the summer? Through the summer, I think you'll hear about some of these feedstock arrangements coming to fruition. We're anticipating that one or two offtake arrangements could possibly be a pen to paper and signed. And that will be great news because that's showing that customers are now stepped up to our business plan. We've got ongoing government support. I mean, this support, when you think about it, Chris, it's a, you know, we're a Canadian company and the US DOD just funded our project going forward. So you can imagine what the Canadian government's looking at relative to an innovative Canadian company. So there are more government funding opportunities coming our way. And again, everything else that sort of ties into our business plan, which is be a first mover, delivering rare voxides to the North American market for all sorts of security and commercial reason. Well, that seems like very exciting. Thanks for your time today, Pat. Yeah, thank you, Chris.