 I'm here today with Investor Intel at PDAC 2020 with Tom Dreyves of Appian Energy. I just want to talk to you a little bit today about your deposit in Northern Saskatchewan because I've read some interesting things about the grade. Well, thank you. Thanks for asking. We're glad to be here at the PDAC. We do have a booth. In terms of our Appian Energy is concentrating our efforts basically on Astis Lake Project, the high grade critical rare earths located in Northern Saskatchewan, Canada. It's world class grades. We see grades up to 49-50% rare earths and a quarter of that is critical rare earths, neodymium, pricey neodymium. Okay, and for the processing that you want to do on site would you just ship out a 50% concentrate or would you do any beneficiation on site? Our rare earths, we have six or seven zones right on surface so it's basically and we're getting monazite up to 80% monazite right on surface. So nature has concentrated already our material, our rare earths and in terms of that sort of the next step for us if we're going to concentrate or we're going to do some work on further concentration on site or take it outside. Currently we're working with SRC which is the Saskatchewan Research Council. The Saskatchewan Research Council has a pilot plan, a 2,000-ton a year pilot plan in Saskatoon and it's licensed to process rare earths and we are working with them to advance the project into the next level basically in terms of processing. I guess with monazite you also get the thorium and the uranium but Saskatchewan is likely the best place in the planet to have that sort of issue. Saskatchewan we get production of up to 20% uranium so the province is a very good mining jurisdiction and they're very familiar with radioactivity, uranium and thorium. So we're lucky that our project is in Saskatchewan. If it was in another jurisdiction it could have been a lot worse. So we think that we can basically being in the area in Saskatchewan and north of Saskatchewan, we're very close to the uranium city where 17 mines operated for years. We think we can basically handle the radioactivity in thorium and some uranium that we have. And what is your view or perspective on what the North American governments are trying to do with the critical materials supply chain? As you know China controls about 80%, 85% of the rare earths supply and it's been the last few years and recently the US government and the Canadian government and the Western world basically governments are getting together because they'd like to develop a supply outside of China, a rare earth supply outside of China. So there was an agreement sign, an MOU sign between the US government and the Canadian government. There was actually a meeting here in Toronto where the US government and the Canadian government and the industry had a meeting to see which is the better way to advance this agreement that they have and how can they expedite the whole process of looking at having some secure supply outside of China. Happy is actively involved in these discussions? Happy is actively involved in these discussions. We have filed an application with the US government and we are talking to, and our Canada, the Canadian industry, Canadian national resources basically here. Okay, well thank you very much. That's very informative and I wish you the best of luck. Thank you. I'm very excited. It's a very exciting project in terms of monosite. We hear that it's probably the highest in North America and possibly one of the highest in the world in terms of monosite and critical and rare earth, so we're excited.